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Recurrence of nephrotic syndrome following kidney transplantation is associated with initial native kidney biopsy findings

Authors :
David T. Selewski
Tarak Srivastava
Shashi K. Nagaraj
Eileen D. Brewer
Jennifer D. Varner
Rachel M Engen
Christoph Licht
Cynthia Silva
John Barcia
Christoph P. Hornik
Annabelle N. Chua
Delbert R. Wigfall
Rasheed Gbadegesin
Adam Bensimhon
Natasha Jawa
Patricia L. Weng
Caroline Straatmann
Michelle N. Rheault
Jonathan H. Pelletier
Scott E. Wenderfer
Karan R. Kumar
Eileen Tsai Chambers
T. Keefe Davis
Keisha L. Gibson
Mahmoud Kallash
John W. Foreman
Larry A. Greenbaum
Source :
Pediatric Nephrology. 33:1773-1780
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2018.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) due to focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) and minimal change disease (MCD) is a leading cause of end stage kidney disease in children. Recurrence of primary disease following transplantation is a major cause of allograft loss. The clinical determinants of disease recurrence are not completely known. Our objectives were to determine risk factors for recurrence of FSGS/MCD following kidney transplantation, and factors that predict response to immunosuppression following recurrence. STUDY DESIGN: Multicenter study of pediatric patients with kidney transplants performed for ESKD due to SRNS between 1/2006–12/2015. Demographics, clinical course, and biopsy data were collected. Patients with primary-SRNS (PSRNS) were defined as those initially resistant to corticosteroid therapy at diagnosis, and patients with late-SRNS (LSRNS) as those initially responsive to steroids who subsequently developed steroid resistance. We performed logistic regression to determine risk factors associated with nephrotic syndrome (NS) recurrence. RESULTS: We analyzed 158 patients; 64 (41%) had recurrence of NS in their renal allograft. Disease recurrence occurred in 78% of patients with LSRNS compared to 39% of those with PSRNS. Patients with MCD on initial native kidney biopsy had a 76% recurrence rate compared with a 40% recurrence rate in those with FSGS. Multivariable analysis showed that MCD histology (OR; 95% CI: 5.6; 1.3–23.7) compared to FSGS predicted disease recurrence. CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric patients with MCD and LSRNS are at higher risk of disease recurrence following kidney transplantation. These findings may be useful for designing studies to test strategies for preventing recurrence.

Details

ISSN :
1432198X and 0931041X
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Nephrology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42d7d2579eb698f6c11acee3057258ca