4.6 Article

Antiphospholipase A2 receptor antibody-positive membranous nephropathy in the kidney donor: Lessons from a serendipitous transplantation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 299-303

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16813

Keywords

autoimmunity; biopsy; clinical research/practice; donors and donation: deceased; kidney disease: immune/inflammatory; kidney transplantation/nephrology; pathology/histopathology

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This study reports the first documented case of primary membranous nephropathy (PMN) in a deceased kidney donor, transplanted to two different recipients, with their clinical and immunological evolution monitored through serial biopsies. The findings suggest that PMN changes can reverse in grafts, indicating the possibility of transplanting from asymptomatic deceased donors with PMN to patients.
Primary membranous nephropathy (PMN) is an autoimmune disease limited to the kidney that is characterized by the presence of circulating PLAR2 antibodies in 70% of the cases and usually positivity for PLA2R and IgG4 by immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining. We report the first documented case of PMN (PLA2R positive) in a deceased kidney donor, transplanted to two different recipients and their clinical and immunological evolution through serial biopsies. Recipient A's first allograft biopsy (Day 26) was compatible with a MN with both positive PLA2R and IgG4 subepithelial deposits in IHC. The donor's preimplantation kidney biopsies were retrieved and reexamined, revealing MN, with high intensity for PLA2R and IgG4 in IHC. Recipient B's protocol allograft biopsy, performed later at 3 months, also revealed histology compatible with MN but without the presence of PLA2R nor IgG4 in IHC. At 1-year follow-up, both recipients maintain graft function. Serial protocol biopsies were performed in both patients showing disappearance of IgG4 in recipient A but the persistence of PLA2R in IHC. We can conclude that, given the reversal of PMN changes in the grafts, it could be considered to transplant a patient from an asymptomatic deceased donor with PMN as long as he maintains unaltered renal function.

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