4.1 Article

Chronic tubulointerstitial kidney disease in untreated adenine phosphoribosyl transferase (APRT) deficiency: A case report

Journal

CLINICAL NEPHROLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 4, Pages 296-301

Publisher

DUSTRI-VERLAG DR KARL FEISTLE
DOI: 10.5414/CN109460

Keywords

adenine phosphoribosyl-transferase deficiency; chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis; chronic kidney disease

Funding

  1. NIH Genetic Variation in Age of Onset of Kidney Failure in Uromodulin Kidney Disease [R21 DK106584]
  2. Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic [AZV CR 17-29786A]
  3. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic [LQ1604 NPU II]

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Adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) deficiency (OMIM #614723) is a rare autosomal recessive defect in the purine salvage pathway that causes excessive production of 2,8-dihydroxyadenine, leading to nephrolithiasis and chronic kidney disease (CKD). This case report describes the natural history of CKD in untreated APRT deficiency. We describe a novel APRT mutation (chr16:88877985 G / C; c.195 C>/G; p.His54Asp) presenting with CKD without nephrolithiasis. The patient initially required dialysis, but kidney function improved with allopurinol. We reviewed APRT deficiency reported in the literature to determine the loss of kidney function in individuals with untreated APRT deficiency and its relationship to nephrolithiasis. We identified 95 individuals in whom kidney function was assessed prior to treatment. There was a bimodal distribution of kidney failure. AKI occurred frequently in childhood due to obstructing nephrolithiasis or crystalline nephropathy and was usually reversible. CKD developed after age 20 in all patients irrespective of nephrolithiasis history, with 36/42 patients > 40 years of age having at least stage 3 CKD, and 24/42 having an eGFR < 10 mL/min/1.73m(2) or being on dialysis. There were 13 adults without nephrolithiasis and 50 adults with nephrolithiasis. The mean age of end-stage renal diesease (ESRD) was 50.52 +/- 13.9 for those without nephrolithiasis and 43.4 +/- 15.8 years for those with nephrolithiasis (p = 0.24). APRT deficiency is associated with slowly progressive CKD that occurs independently of nephrolithiasis. Diagnosis should be considered in all individuals with chronic tubulointerstitial kidney disease, with or without the presence of nephrolithiasis. In our patient, allopurinol 300 mg/day resulted in improvement of kidney function.

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