Membranous nephropathy and primary biliary cholangitis: A case report and review of the literature

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Membranous nephropathy and primary biliary cholangitis: A case report and review of the literature. / Zimmermann, Jonas; Harendza, Sigrid; Noriega, Mercedes; Reinhard, Linda; Hoxha, Elion.

In: CLIN NEPHROL, Vol. 96, No. 1, 07.2021, p. 36-45.

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@article{bcb583f2aa634c49b320b2bf2ffaa43a,
title = "Membranous nephropathy and primary biliary cholangitis: A case report and review of the literature",
abstract = "AIM: Membranous nephropathy (MN) and primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) are autoimmune diseases that coexist in some cases and might share a common pathogenesis. In 75 - 80% of MN patients, PLA2R1 or THSD7A is the target antigen responsible for disease development, while in the remaining cases, MN pathogenesis is not clear. Our aim was to identify potential antigens playing an overlapping pathogenic role for development of both PBC and MN.MATERIALS AND METHODS: Serum from a patient with PBC-associated MN was analyzed for MN and PBC-specific autoantibodies and kidney biopsy tissue was stained for the respective antigens. A review of the literature for published PBC-associated MN cases was performed.RESULTS: A 39-year-old male patient was diagnosed with PBC-associated MN. Serology tests revealed negativity for PLA2R1-ab and THSD7A-ab, but positivity for two PBC-specific antibodies: M2-ab and gp210-ab. Kidney biopsy was stained for both PBC-specific antigens, PDC-E2 and gp210, as well as PLA2R1 and THSD7A, showing no MN-specific positivity. Human glomerular extracts also did not contain PDC-E2 or gp210. A review of all 17 published cases of PBC-associated MN showed that 71% of patients suffered from at least one additional autoimmune disease, and different IgG-subclasses were found in the renal immune deposits of these patients.CONCLUSION: These results indicate that both PBC-antigens are not the putative antigen(s) leading to MN development in this patient. PBC-antigens might not be directly responsible for MN development. Both diseases seem to present as autoimmune phenomena triggered by interaction between unknown factors.",
keywords = "Adult, Glomerulonephritis, Membranous, Humans, Kidney/pathology, Liver Cirrhosis, Biliary, Male",
author = "Jonas Zimmermann and Sigrid Harendza and Mercedes Noriega and Linda Reinhard and Elion Hoxha",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
doi = "10.5414/CN110363",
language = "English",
volume = "96",
pages = "36--45",
journal = "CLIN NEPHROL",
issn = "0301-0430",
publisher = "Dustri-Verlag Dr. Karl Feistle",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Membranous nephropathy and primary biliary cholangitis: A case report and review of the literature

AU - Zimmermann, Jonas

AU - Harendza, Sigrid

AU - Noriega, Mercedes

AU - Reinhard, Linda

AU - Hoxha, Elion

PY - 2021/7

Y1 - 2021/7

N2 - AIM: Membranous nephropathy (MN) and primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) are autoimmune diseases that coexist in some cases and might share a common pathogenesis. In 75 - 80% of MN patients, PLA2R1 or THSD7A is the target antigen responsible for disease development, while in the remaining cases, MN pathogenesis is not clear. Our aim was to identify potential antigens playing an overlapping pathogenic role for development of both PBC and MN.MATERIALS AND METHODS: Serum from a patient with PBC-associated MN was analyzed for MN and PBC-specific autoantibodies and kidney biopsy tissue was stained for the respective antigens. A review of the literature for published PBC-associated MN cases was performed.RESULTS: A 39-year-old male patient was diagnosed with PBC-associated MN. Serology tests revealed negativity for PLA2R1-ab and THSD7A-ab, but positivity for two PBC-specific antibodies: M2-ab and gp210-ab. Kidney biopsy was stained for both PBC-specific antigens, PDC-E2 and gp210, as well as PLA2R1 and THSD7A, showing no MN-specific positivity. Human glomerular extracts also did not contain PDC-E2 or gp210. A review of all 17 published cases of PBC-associated MN showed that 71% of patients suffered from at least one additional autoimmune disease, and different IgG-subclasses were found in the renal immune deposits of these patients.CONCLUSION: These results indicate that both PBC-antigens are not the putative antigen(s) leading to MN development in this patient. PBC-antigens might not be directly responsible for MN development. Both diseases seem to present as autoimmune phenomena triggered by interaction between unknown factors.

AB - AIM: Membranous nephropathy (MN) and primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) are autoimmune diseases that coexist in some cases and might share a common pathogenesis. In 75 - 80% of MN patients, PLA2R1 or THSD7A is the target antigen responsible for disease development, while in the remaining cases, MN pathogenesis is not clear. Our aim was to identify potential antigens playing an overlapping pathogenic role for development of both PBC and MN.MATERIALS AND METHODS: Serum from a patient with PBC-associated MN was analyzed for MN and PBC-specific autoantibodies and kidney biopsy tissue was stained for the respective antigens. A review of the literature for published PBC-associated MN cases was performed.RESULTS: A 39-year-old male patient was diagnosed with PBC-associated MN. Serology tests revealed negativity for PLA2R1-ab and THSD7A-ab, but positivity for two PBC-specific antibodies: M2-ab and gp210-ab. Kidney biopsy was stained for both PBC-specific antigens, PDC-E2 and gp210, as well as PLA2R1 and THSD7A, showing no MN-specific positivity. Human glomerular extracts also did not contain PDC-E2 or gp210. A review of all 17 published cases of PBC-associated MN showed that 71% of patients suffered from at least one additional autoimmune disease, and different IgG-subclasses were found in the renal immune deposits of these patients.CONCLUSION: These results indicate that both PBC-antigens are not the putative antigen(s) leading to MN development in this patient. PBC-antigens might not be directly responsible for MN development. Both diseases seem to present as autoimmune phenomena triggered by interaction between unknown factors.

KW - Adult

KW - Glomerulonephritis, Membranous

KW - Humans

KW - Kidney/pathology

KW - Liver Cirrhosis, Biliary

KW - Male

U2 - 10.5414/CN110363

DO - 10.5414/CN110363

M3 - SCORING: Review article

C2 - 33896446

VL - 96

SP - 36

EP - 45

JO - CLIN NEPHROL

JF - CLIN NEPHROL

SN - 0301-0430

IS - 1

ER -