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11
result(s) for
"Murtas, Corrado"
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Low-dose ofatumumab for rituximab-resistant nephrotic syndrome
2015
Drug resistant idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (DRNS) remains a therapeutic dilemma. In this pilot study, the efficacy of the new fully humanised, anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody ofatumumab was tested in 4 children with persistence of proteinuria for at least 12 months in spite of a full drug approach (including rituximab). We used a low-dose 2-infusion ofatumumab model (300+700 mg/1.73 m2 2 weeks apart) using specified premedication. Transient normalisation of proteinuria (persisting for 2 months) was achieved in 1 child while another presented stable remission after 12 months; both had normal renal function. The outcome was not modified in the remaining 2 children presenting an impaired renal function. These results demonstrate that low-dose ofatumumab may induce remittance of proteinuria in children with a long story of DRNS and normal renal function. Further studies are needed to test whether higher doses of ofatumumab can also modify proteinuria in patients with impaired renal function.
Journal Article
Isolated C3 hypocomplementemia as an early predictor of chronic kidney disease in lupus nephritis
2025
The role of complement in the long-term renal survival of patients with lupus nephritis (LN) remains poorly understood. Recent studies suggest its potential impact; however, long-term data are lacking.
This multicenter, observational, retrospective study aimed at investigating the influence of complement levels on long-term renal outcomes in LN patients. We evaluated whether isolated C3 hypocomplementemia (i-LowC3), defined as serum low C3 (≤80 mg/dL) and normal C4 (>10 mg/dL) six months after kidney biopsy is associated with subsequent risk of chronic kidney disease (CKD), End Stage Kidney Disease (ESKD) or death.
445 patients with LN were studied (median follow-up 4.9 years). Based on six-month C3/C4 levels, patients were categorized into i-LowC3 (91 patients) and controls (354 patients). Over the first six months, serum C3 and C4 levels increased by a median of 20 mg/dL and 5 mg/dL, respectively. i-LowC3 was significantly associated with twice the risk of a poor outcome, including CKD, ESKD, composite outcome of CKD or death and ESKD or death, with lower survival rates for all these outcomes compared to controls (P < 0.001). Multivariate Cox regression analysis revealed a lower risk of CKD and CKD or death with increases in C3 levels during the first six months, while i-LowC3 was associated with an independent higher risk for these outcomes.
The trajectory of serum C3 levels within the first six months appears to predict long-term renal prognosis of LN patients. These findings support the use of i-LowC3 as a low-cost, readily available biomarker to guide early treatment of LN patients.
Journal Article
Slowly progressive anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated renal vasculitis: clinico-pathological characterization and outcome
by
Gopaluni, Seerapani
,
Moroni, Gabriella
,
Cassia, Matthias A.
in
Antibodies
,
Care and treatment
,
Chronic kidney failure
2021
Although rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis is the main renal phenotype of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV), slow renal disease progression is sometimes observed. These forms have been rarely discussed; we analysed their prevalence, clinico-pathological characteristics and outcome.
We screened patients with microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) and granulomatosis with polyangiitis followed at seven referral centres and selected those with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) reduction <50% over a 6-month period preceding diagnosis. Data regarding patient features and response to treatment were retrieved.
Of 856 patients, 41 (5%) had slowly progressive renal AAV. All had MPA and all but one was P-ANCA/myeloperoxidase (MPO) ANCA-positive. At diagnosis, the median age was 70 years [interquartile range (IQR) 64-78] and extra-renal manifestations were absent or subclinical (interstitial lung lesions in 10, 24%). The median (IQR) eGFR was 23 mL/min/1.73 m
(15-35); six patients (15%) had started renal replacement therapy (RRT). All had proteinuria (median 1180 mg/24 h, IQR 670-2600) and micro-haematuria. Main histologic findings were extracapillary proliferation at chronic stages and glomerulosclerosis; following Berden's classification, 6/28 biopsies (21%) were 'focal', 1/28 (4%) 'crescentic', 9/28 (32%) 'mixed' and 12/28 (43%) 'sclerotic'. At last follow-up (median 32 months, IQR 12-52), 20/34 patients (59%) treated with immunosuppression had eGFR improvement >25% as compared with diagnosis, while 4/34 (12%) had started RRT.
AAV may present with slow renal disease progression; this subset is hallmarked by advanced age at diagnosis, positive MPO-ANCA, subclinical interstitial lung lesions and chronic damage at kidney biopsy. Partial renal recovery may occur following immunosuppression.
Journal Article
Urinary secretion and extracellular aggregation of mutant uromodulin isoforms
2012
Uromodulin is exclusively expressed in the thick ascending limb and is the most abundant protein secreted in urine where it is found in high-molecular-weight polymers. Its biological functions are still elusive, but it is thought to play a protective role against urinary tract infection, calcium oxalate crystal formation, and regulation of water and salt balance in the thick ascending limb. Mutations in uromodulin are responsible for autosomal-dominant kidney diseases characterized by defective urine concentrating ability, hyperuricemia, gout, tubulointerstitial fibrosis, renal cysts, and chronic kidney disease. Previous in vitro studies found retention in the endoplasmic reticulum as a common feature of all uromodulin mutant isoforms. Both in vitro and in vivo we found that mutant isoforms partially escaped retention in the endoplasmic reticulum and reached the plasma membrane where they formed large extracellular aggregates that have a dominant-negative effect on coexpressed wild-type protein. Notably, mutant uromodulin excretion was detected in patients carrying uromodulin mutations. Thus, our results suggest that mutant uromodulin exerts a gain-of-function effect that can be exerted by both intra- and extracellular forms of the protein.
Journal Article
Membranous glomerulonephritis: histological and serological features to differentiate cancer-related and non-related forms
2016
Membranous nephropathy is a frequent cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults. In most patients, it appears as a primary renal disease but in about 20 % of cases membranous nephropathy is associated with systemic conditions such as systemic lupus erythematosus, infections or cancer, or with drug exposure. Reliable differentiation between primary and secondary membranous nephropathy has important implications for the patient, because of different therapeutic approaches between the different forms. The recent in vivo definition of glomerular targets of autoimmunity in idiopathic membranous nephropathy represented a real breakthrough and nowadays more than one podocyte antigen is considered in some way implicated in the pathogenesis of human membranous nephropathy. Specific antibodies against all these components have been detected in serum of patients and could become biomarkers of membranous nephropathy and/or of disease activity. In this brief review, we discuss the usefulness of newly described autoantibodies in the differential diagnosis of secondary membranous nephropathy. Histological clues for recognizing the two pathological entities are also analysed with regard to the available scientific evidence on this issue. Our evaluation shows that more research is needed to identify the best approach to reach a correct diagnosis of primary or secondary membranous nephropathy.
Journal Article
Mechanisms Limiting Renal Tissue Protection and Repair in Glomerulonephritis
by
Angeletti, Andrea
,
Spinelli, Sonia
,
Bruschi, Maurizio
in
Albumin
,
Annexins
,
Anti-Inflammatory Agents
2023
Glomerulonephritis are renal disorders resulting from different pathogenic mechanisms (i.e., autoimmunity, complement, inflammatory activation, etc.). Clarifying details of the pathogenic cascade is basic to limit the progression from starting inflammation to degenerative stages. The balance between tissue injury, activation of protective systems and renal tissue repair determines the final outcome. Induction of an oxidative stress is part of glomerular inflammation and activation of protective antioxidant systems has a crucial role in reducing tissue effects. The generation of highly reactive oxygen species can be evaluated in vivo by tracing the inner-layer content of phosphatidyl ethanolamine and phosphatidyl serine in cell membranes. Albumin is the major antioxidant in serum and the level of oxidized albumin is another indirect sign of oxidative stress. Studies performed in Gn, specifically in FSGS, showed a high degree of oxidation in most contexts. High levels of circulating anti-SOD2 antibodies, limiting the detoxyfing activity of SOD2, have been detected in autoimmune Gn(lupus nephritis and membranous nephropathy) in association with persistence of proteinuria and worsening of renal function. In renal transplant, high levels of circulating anti-Glutathione S-transferase antibodies have been correlated with chronic antibody rejection and progressive loss of renal function. Annexins, mainly ANXA1 and ANXA2, play a general anti-inflammatory effect by inhibiting neutrophil functions. Cytosolic ANXA1 is decreased in apoptotic neutrophils of patients with glomerular polyangitis in association with delayed apoptosis that is considered the mechanism for polyangitis. High circulating levels of anti-ANXA1 and anti-ANXA2 antibodies characterize lupus nephritis implying a reduced anti-inflammatory effect. High circulating levels of antibodies targeting Macrophages (anti-FMNL1) have been detected in Gn in association with proteinuria. They potentially modify the intra-glomerular presence of protective macrophages (M2a, M2c) thus acting on the composition of renal infiltrate and on tissue repair.
Journal Article
Rituximab is a safe and effective long-term treatment for children with steroid and calcineurin inhibitor–dependent idiopathic nephrotic syndrome
by
Edefonti, Alberto
,
Montini, Giovanni
,
Wang, Xiangyu
in
Administration, Oral
,
Adolescent
,
Age Factors
2013
In children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, rituximab can maintain short-term remission with withdrawal of prednisone and calcineurin inhibitors. Long-term effects including the number of repeated infusions to maintain remission are unknown. To test this, we treated 46 consecutive children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome lasting for at least 1 year (mean 6.3 years), maintained in remission with oral prednisone and calcineurin inhibitors. They received 1–5 rituximab courses during a median follow-up of 3 years. Oral agents were tapered after each infusion, and completely withdrawn within 45 days. Rituximab was well tolerated. Six-month probabilities of remission were 48% after the first infusion and 37% after subsequent infusions. One- and 2-year-remission probabilities were, respectively, 20 and 10%. Median time intervals between complete oral-agent withdrawal and relapse were 5.6 and 8.5 months, respectively, following the first and subsequent courses. The time to reconstitution of CD20 cells correlated with the duration of remission, but was not associated with variation in FcyR, CD20, or SMPDL-3B polymorphisms. Podocyte Src phosphorylation was normal. Thus, rituximab can be safely and repeatedly used as a prednisone and calcineurin inhibitor–sparing therapy in a considerable proportion of children with dependent forms of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. Further study is needed to identify patients who will benefit most from rituximab therapy.
Journal Article
Novel biomarkers and pathophysiology of membranous nephropathy: PLA2R and beyond
by
Spinelli, Sonia
,
Angeletti, Andrea
,
Bruschi, Maurizio
in
Antigens
,
CKJ Review
,
Pathophysiology
2024
Research on membranous nephropathy truly exploded in the last 15 years. This happened because of the application of new techniques (laser capture microdissection, mass spectrometry, protein G immunoprecipitation, arrays) to the study of its pathogenesis. After the discovery of PLA2R as the major target antigen, many other antigens were identified and others are probably ongoing. Clinical and pathophysiology rebounds of new discoveries are relevant in terms of diagnosis and prognosis and it is time to make a first assessment of the innovative issues. In terms of classification, target antigens can be divided into: ‘membrane antigens’ and ‘second wave’ antigens. The first group consists of antigens constitutionally expressed on the podocyte membrane (as PLA2R) that may become a target of an autoimmune process because of perturbation of immune-tolerance. ‘Second wave’ antigens are antigens neo-expressed by the podocyte or by infiltrating cells after a stressing event: this allows the immune system to produce antibodies against them that intensify and maintain glomerular damage. With this abundance of target antigens it is not possible, at the moment, to test all antibodies at the bedside. In the absence of this possibility, the role of histological evaluation is still irreplaceable.
Journal Article
Use of Rituximab in Children with Steroid- and Calcineurin-Inhibitor-Dependent Idiopathic Nephrotic Syndrome
2013
In children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome rituximab can maintain short-term remission with withdrawal of prednisone and calcineurin-inhibitors. Long-term effects including number of repeated infusions to maintain remission are unknown. We treated with rituximab 46 consecutive children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome lasting for at least one year (6.3±4.1 years), who were maintained in remission with oral prednisone and calcineurin inhibitors. They received 1–5 rituximab courses during a median follow-up of three years (range 1–5). Oral agents were tapered after each infusion, and completely withdrawn within 45 days. Rituximab was well tolerated. Six-month probabilities of remission were 48% after the first infusion and 37% after subsequent infusions. One- and two-year-remission probabilities were respectively 20% and 10%. Median time intervals between complete oral-agent withdrawal and relapse were 5.6 and 8.5 months respectively following the first and subsequent courses. Time to reconstitution of CD20 cells correlated with the duration of remission, but was not associated with variation in FcyR, CD20 or SMPDL-3B polymorphisms. Podocyte Src phosphorylation was normal. Rituximab can be safely and repeatedly used as prednisone and calcineurin-inhibitor-sparing therapy in a considerable proportion of children with dependent forms of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. Further research is needed to identify patients who will benefit most from rituximab therapy.
Journal Article