Evidence from the Oxford Classification cohort supports the clinical value of subclassification of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in IgA nephropathy

Autor: Bellur, Shubha S., Lepeytre, Fanny, Vorobyeva, Olga, Troyanov, Stéphan, Cook, H. Terence, Roberts, Ian S.D., Alpers, Charles E., Amore, Alessandro, Barratt, Jonathan, Berthoux, Francois, Bonsib, Stephen, Bruijn, Jan A., Cattran, Daniel C., Coppo, Rosanna, D'Agati, Vivette, D'Amico, Giuseppe, Emancipator, Steven, Emma, Francesco, Feehally, John, Ferrario, Franco, Fervenza, Fernando C., Florquin, Sandrine, Fogo, Agnes, Geddes, Colin C., Groene, Hermann-Josef, Haas, Mark, Herzenberg, Andrew M., Hill, Prue A., Hogg, Ronald J., Hsu, Stephen I., Jennette, J. Charles, Joh, Kensuke, Julian, Bruce A., Kawamura, Tetsuya, Lai, Fernand M., Li, Lei-Shi, Li, Philip K.T., Liu, Zhi-Hong, Mackinnon, Bruce, Mezzano, Sergio, Schena, F. Paolo, Tomino, Yasuhiko, Walker, Patrick D., Wang, Haiyan, Weening, Jan J., Yoshikawa, Nori, Zhang, Hong
Zdroj: Kidney International; January 2017, Vol. 91 Issue: 1 p235-243, 9p
Abstrakt: Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is a common finding in IgA nephropathy (IgAN). Here we assessed FSGS lesions in the Oxford Classification patient cohort and correlated histology with clinical presentation and outcome to determine whether subclassification of the S score in IgAN is reproducible and of clinical value. Our subclassification of lesions in 137 individuals with segmental glomerulosclerosis or adhesion (S1) identified 38% with podocyte hypertrophy, 10% with hyalinosis, 9% with resorption droplets within podocytes, 7% with tip lesions, 3% with perihilar sclerosis, and 2% with endocapillary foam cells. Reproducibility was good or excellent for tip lesions, hyalinosis, and perihilar sclerosis; moderate for podocyte hypertrophy; and poor for resorption droplets, adhesion only, and endocapillary foam cells. Podocyte hypertrophy and tip lesions were strongly associated with greater initial proteinuria. During follow-up of patients without immunosuppression, those with these features had more rapid renal function decline and worse survival from a combined event compared to S1 patients without such features and those without FSGS. Also in individuals with podocyte hypertrophy or tip lesions, immunosuppressive therapy was associated with better renal survival. In IgA nephropathy, the presence of podocyte hypertrophy or tip lesions, markers of podocyte injury, were reproducible. These features are strongly associated with proteinuria and, in untreated patients, carry a worse prognosis. Thus, our findings support reporting podocytopathic features alongside the S score of the Oxford Classification.
Databáze: Supplemental Index