1. Frequently relapsing anti-glomerular basement membrane antibody disease with changing clinical phenotype and antibody characteristics over time
- Author
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Sean J. Barbour, Alex B. Magil, and Bobby Gu
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030232 urology & nephrology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Immunoglobulin G ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Goodpasture's disease ,Medicine ,Autoimmune disease ,Basement membrane ,Atypical Anti-Gbm Disease ,Transplantation ,Kidney ,Lung ,biology ,urogenital system ,business.industry ,Glomerulonephritis ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,nervous system diseases ,anti-GBM antibody disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Nephrology ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,ELISA ,Pulmonary hemorrhage ,pulmonary hemorrhage ,Antibody ,business ,glomerulonephritis - Abstract
Anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) antibody disease is a typically monophasic autoimmune disease with severe pulmonary and renal involvement. We report an atypical case of frequently relapsing anti-GBM antibody disease with both anti-GBM antibody–positive flares with pulmonary and renal involvement, and anti-GBM antibody–negative flares that were pulmonary limited with no histologic renal disease. This is the first report of alternating disease phenotype and anti-GBM antibody status over time. Disease severity paralleled the detection of anti-GBM antibodies but was independent of IgG subtype staining along the GBM. This case suggests a role for changing subpopulations of pathogenic antibodies as an explanation for variation in disease phenotype and anti-GBM antibody results.
- Published
- 2016
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