Spectrum of Steroid-Resistant and Congenital Nephrotic Syndrome in Children: The PodoNet Registry Cohort

  • Agnes Trautmann
  • Monica Bodria
  • Fatih Ozaltin
  • Alaleh Gheisari
  • Anette Melk
  • Marta Azocar
  • Ali Anarat
  • Salim Caliskan
  • Francesco Emma
  • Jutta Gellermann
  • Jun Oh
  • Esra Baskin
  • Joanna Ksiazek
  • Giuseppe Remuzzi
  • Ozlem Erdogan
  • Sema Akman
  • Jiri Dusek
  • Tinatin Davitaia
  • Ozan Özkaya
  • Fotios Papachristou
  • Agnieszka Firszt-Adamczyk
  • Tomasz Urasinski
  • Sara Testa
  • Rafael T Krmar
  • Lidia Hyla-Klekot
  • Andrea Pasini
  • Z Birsin Özcakar
  • Peter Sallay
  • Nilgun Cakar
  • Monica Galanti
  • Joelle Terzic
  • Bilal Aoun
  • Alberto Caldas Afonso
  • Hanna Szymanik-Grzelak
  • Beata S Lipska
  • Sven Schnaidt
  • Franz Schaefer
  • PodoNet Consortium

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome is a rare kidney disease involving either immune-mediated or genetic alterations of podocyte structure and function. The rare nature, heterogeneity, and slow evolution of the disorder are major obstacles to systematic genotype-phenotype, intervention, and outcome studies, hampering the development of evidence-based diagnostic and therapeutic concepts. To overcome these limitations, the PodoNet Consortium has created an international registry for congenital nephrotic syndrome and childhood-onset steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome.

DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: Since August of 2009, clinical, biochemical, genetic, and histopathologic information was collected both retrospectively and prospectively from 1655 patients with childhood-onset steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome, congenital nephrotic syndrome, or persistent subnephrotic proteinuria of likely genetic origin at 67 centers in 21 countries through an online portal.

RESULTS: Steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome manifested in the first 5 years of life in 64% of the patients. Congenital nephrotic syndrome accounted for 6% of all patients. Extrarenal abnormalities were reported in 17% of patients. The most common histopathologic diagnoses were FSGS (56%), minimal change nephropathy (21%), and mesangioproliferative GN (12%). Mutation screening was performed in 1174 patients, and a genetic disease cause was identified in 23.6% of the screened patients. Among 14 genes with reported mutations, abnormalities in NPHS2 (n=138), WT1 (n=48), and NPHS1 (n=41) were most commonly identified. The proportion of patients with a genetic disease cause decreased with increasing manifestation age: from 66% in congenital nephrotic syndrome to 15%-16% in schoolchildren and adolescents. Among various intensified immunosuppressive therapy protocols, calcineurin inhibitors and rituximab yielded consistently high response rates, with 40%-45% of patients achieving complete remission. Confirmation of a genetic diagnosis but not the histopathologic disease type was strongly predictive of intensified immunosuppressive therapy responsiveness. Post-transplant disease recurrence was noted in 25.8% of patients without compared with 4.5% (n=4) of patients with a genetic diagnosis.

CONCLUSIONS: The PodoNet cohort may serve as a source of reference for future clinical and genetic research in this rare but significant kidney disease.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1555-9041
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 04.2015
PubMed 25635037