4.4 Article

A critical re-analysis of cases of post-transplantation recurrence in genetic nephrotic syndrome

期刊

PEDIATRIC NEPHROLOGY
卷 36, 期 11, 页码 3757-3769

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00467-021-05134-4

关键词

Nephrotic syndrome; Post-transplantation disease recurrence; Genetic

资金

  1. Elizabeth Blackwell Institute, University of Bristol
  2. Wellcome Trust
  3. Kidney Research UK
  4. Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund

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The post-transplantation recurrence in genetic children with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome is rare and mainly driven by an immune-mediated process involving antibody production. Biallelic pathogenic variants in NPHS1 are commonly reported in post-transplantation nephrotic syndrome cases, while the mechanism for recurrence involving other pathogenic variants in NPHS2, WT1 and NUP93 remains unclear.
Background Genetic defects in podocyte proteins account for up to 30% of steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) in the paediatric population. Most children with genetic SRNS are resistant to immunosuppression and at high risk of progression to stage 5 chronic kidney disease. Kidney transplantation is often the treatment of choice. The possibility of post-transplantation disease recurrence in genetic SRNS remains controversial, and poses fundamental questions about disease biology. Methods We critically evaluated the published cases of post-transplantation recurrence in genetic patients, particularly testing 'mutations' against the most recent population variant databases, in order to clarify the diagnoses, and compare the clinical courses and responses to therapy. Results Biallelic pathogenic variants in NPHS1 leading to a complete absence of nephrin were the most commonly reported and best understood instance of nephrotic syndrome occurring post-transplantation. This is an immune-mediated process driven by antibody production against the novel nephrin protein in the allograft. We also identified a number of plausible reported cases of post-transplantation recurrence involving pathogenic variants in NPHS2 (8 patients, biallelic), one in WT1 (monoallelic) and one in NUP93 (biallelic). However, the mechanism for recurrence in these cases remains unclear. Other instances of recurrence in genetic disease were difficult to interpret due to differing clinical criteria, inclusion of patients without true pathogenic variants or the influence of other factors on renal outcome. Conclusions Overall, post-transplantation recurrence remains very rare in patients with genetic SRNS. It appears to occur later after transplantation than in other patients and usually responds well to plasmapheresis with a good renal outcome.

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