[The significance of urinary podocytes in patients with active lupus nephritis]

Autor: Jing-zi, Li, Ying, Liu, Jie, E, Hai-chang, Huang, Feng, Yu, Wan-zhong, Zou, Hai-yan, Wang
Rok vydání: 2007
Předmět:
Zdroj: Zhonghua nei ke za zhi. 46(2)
ISSN: 0578-1426
Popis: To assess the significance of urinary podocyte and its possible implication as a marker of activity of lupus nephritis.The presence of podocytes in urinary sediment was detected with immunochemical staining using anti-podocalyxin antibody. The correlation of the number of urinary podocytes with activity index of renal pathological lesions, hematuria, and proteinuria was analyzed respectively. The proliferating podocytes in renal biopsy tissue and urine from patients with class IV lupus nephritis were examined with double immunohistochemical staining.Thirty-one patients with lupus nephritis undergoing renal biopsy were enrolled into the study. Renal pathological findings of the patients could be classified into WHO class III (25.8%), class IV (64.5%) and class V (9.7%). 90% of the patients had positive urinary podocytes. The number of urinary podocytes was strongly and positively correlated with the severity of hematuria (r=0.639, P=0.000) and glomerular pathological activity index (r=0.487, P=0.014) in patients of class III and class IV. The amount of proteinuria was not correlated with pathological activity index, even though all the patients had proteinuria. Furthermore, the number of urinary podocytes, the severity of hematuria and the amount of proteinuria were all decreased after treatment with methyl prednisone, cyclophosphamide or mycophenolate mofetil. Interestingly, the urinary podocytes could disappear even before the remission of hematuria and proteinuria after treatment. Proliferative podocytes were observed both in biopsied kidney tissue and urinary sediments in patients of class IV.The presence and the number of urinary podocytes can be used as a valuable marker to grade the activity of lupus nephritis and to evaluate the efficacy of steroid therapy.
Databáze: OpenAIRE