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Dr : Mohamed Abdelhafez Nephrology specialist MNGH Agenda DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS RENAL AND EXTRARENAL MANIFESTATIONS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS PATHOLOGY OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS Lupus in Diaysis MANGMENT OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS Definition • The American College of Rheumatology(ACR) criteria for the diagnosis of SLE have been widely used in both epidemiologic and treatment studies • However , many patients with “lupus-like” conditions and others who meet fewer than four ACR criteria should still be recognized as requiring therapy. • Lupus nephritis (LN) is an immune complex glomerulonephritis that is a common and serious feature of SLE . EPIDEMIOLOGY • The incidence and prevalence of lupus and LN are influenced by age,gender, ethnicity, geographic region, but across populations, clinically important kidney disease will occur in 40% of patients. • The peak incidence of lupus is age 15 to 45 years, with women to men by 10 : 1. • Among lupus patients, LN affects both genders equally and is more severe in children and men. • Both lupus and LN are three to four times more common in blacks, Asians, and Hispanics than in Caucasians. • Additional risk factors for LN include younger age, lower socioeconomic status, more ACR criteria for SLE, longer disease duration, family history of SLE . Agenda DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS RENAL AND EXTRARENAL MANIFESTATIONS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS PATHOLOGY OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS MANGMENT OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS ETIOLOGY • Multiple genes predispose to lupus, supported by 1 clustering in families, 2 concordance of SLE in more than 25% of identical twins ,3 frequency of positive autoantibodies and autoimmune disorders in family of SLE patients. • Homozygous deficiency of complement components (C1q, C2, C4) carries a high risk for development of SLE • Hormonal factors are suggested by the strong female predisposition, the exacerbations during or shortly after pregnancy. • Whereas exposure to certain medications can produce SLE or a lupuslike syndrome . PATHOGENESIS • A number of mechanisms may contribute to SLE, including abnormal exposure to self antigens, T cell hyperactivity , increased B cell–stimulating cytokines, and B cell hyperactivity. • The failure of apoptotic mechanisms to delete or to silence autoreactive cells (tolerance) may allow clonal expansion of such cells later in life, leading to autoantibody production. • Autoantibodies combine with antigen to produce immune complexes that if not adequately cleared may deposit in various organs, inciting inflammatory responses. • Complement components activated by immune complexes and contribute to the inflammatory cascade. • A hallmark of glomerular involvement in LN is the accumulation of immune complexes. • Patients with LN have autoantibodies against double-stranded DNA (dsDNA), Sm antigen, C1q, nucleosomes, and other antigens . PATHOGENESIS • Mesangial and subendothelial immune deposits are derived from deposition of circulating immune complexes, whereas subepithelial immune complexes may include those formed in situ. • Activation of procoagulant factors, leukocyte infiltration into the kidneys with release of their proteolytic enzymes, and activation of cytokines associated with cellular proliferation and matrix formation. Agenda DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS RENAL AND EXTRARENAL MANIFESTATIONS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS PATHOLOGY OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS MANGMENT OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS Renal Manifestations CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS Extrarenal Manifestations • Patients with active SLE often present with nonspecific complaints of malaise, low-grade fever, poor appetite, and weight loss • Other common features include patchy alopecia; oral or nasal ulcerations; arthralgias and nondeforming arthritis. • A variety of dermal findings, photosensitivity, Raynaud’s phenomenon, and “butterfly” facial rash. • Livedo reticularis is seen in 15% of cases and may be associated with miscarriages, thrombocytopenia. • Neuropsychiatric involvement presents with headache,nerve palsies, frank coma, and psychoses. • Serositis, in the form of pleuritis or pericarditis, affects up to 40% of patients. • Pulmonary hypertension can develop silently as a result of multiple pulmonary emboli or intravascular coagulation in association with APA. • Libman-Sacks endocarditis and more common mitral valve prolapse can be detected clinically or by echocardiography. • Hematologic abnormalities include anemia caused by impaired erythropoiesis, autoimmune hemolysis, and bleeding. • Thrombocytopenia and leukopenia may be part of the disease or may result from complications of therapy. • Thrombotic events should prompt a search for APA and other procoagulant abnormalities Agenda DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS RENAL AND EXTRARENAL MANIFESTATIONS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS PATHOLOGY OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS MANGMENT OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS Agenda DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS RENAL AND EXTRARENAL MANIFESTATIONS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS PATHOLOGY OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS MANGMENT OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS Agenda DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS RENAL AND EXTRARENAL MANIFESTATIONS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS PATHOLOGY OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS MANGMENT OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS PATHOLOGY • Although LN may affect all structures of the kidney, glomerular involvement has been the best studied component and correlates well with the presentation, course, and treatment. • The currently used International Society of Nephrology (ISN)/Renal Pathology Society (RPS) classification • There is a deficit of the ISN/RPS system, as ahistologic and clinical involvement of other renal compartments is seen, because interstitial and vascular injury are predictors of kidney outcomes. Transformation of pathology • Serial biopsy specimens often show transformation from one to another histologic glomerular class. • Some patients with increased clinical activity will transform from a more benign or less proliferativeclass (ISN class II or V) to a more active proliferative lesion (ISN class III or IV). • With successful treatment, other patients will transform from a proliferative class (ISN class III or IV) to a more predominant membranous pattern (ISN class V). • Extremely uncommon are patients who have active proliferative LN on biopsy but no clinical or urinary sediment changes, with normal anti-dsDNA and serum complement levels, so-called silent LN. PATHOLOGY ISN/RPS class I: minimal mesangial lupus nephritis. Light microscopy is normal, but immunoperoxidase shows C1q localization (associated with IgG and C3) throughout the mesangial area. ISN/RPS class II: lupus nephritis (mesangial disease). A, Mesangial expansion but little increase in tuft cellularity, and the peripheral capillary walls are normal. (Silver methenamine stain.) B, Extensive mesangial IgG deposits shown by immunoperoxidase; the aggregates are just beginning to invade peripheral capillary walls. SN/RPS class III: focal proliferative lupus nephritis. A, Low-power magnification shows focal and segmental proliferative lesion– active (class IIIA) with less than 50% of glomeruli affected. (Hematoxylineosin stain.) B, Area of focal necrosis containing cellular debris,karyorrhexis (arrow), is surrounded by an area of cellular proliferation. (Silver methenamine/HE.) ISN/RPS class IV: lupus nephritis. A, Active, diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis. B, Immunoperoxidase staining shows dense, irregular aggregates of IgG along the peripheral capillary walls. ISN/RPS class V: membranous lupus. B, Silver methenamine–stained section shows some double contouring of the silverpositive basement membrane (arrow) and subendothelium-deposited material as well as the characteristic silver-positive spikes of basement membrane–like material. C, Electron micrograph shows the predominantly subepithelial electrondense deposits (D) separated by protrusions of basement membrane material (spikes, S) Interstitial lupus nephritis A, Interstitial infiltrate invading and destroying tubules (tubulitis). Tubular basement membranes, which stain black with silver, are digested in the areas of tubulitis (arrow). B, Immunofluorescence shows aggregates of C3 in the tubular basement membrane (right) as well as within the glomerulus (left). Such tubular basement membrane aggregates are common in lupus nephritis Vascular damage in lupus nephritis. Thrombus (arrow) occludes a glomerular capillary loop in this class IV biopsy . A thrombus contains platelets and fibrin as well as immunoglobulins and thus has some characteristics of true thrombus. (Silvermethenamine/hematoxylin stain.) Clinical and Histopathologic Correlations • • • • Patients with ISN class I biopsies usually have no evidence of clinical renal disease. patients with ISN class II may have elevated anti-dsDNA or low complement levels, but in general, their urinary sediment is inactive, hypertension is infrequent, the GFR is preserved, and proteinuria is rarely above 1 g/24 h. Patients with class I and class II biopsy findings have an excellent renal prognosis unless they transform to another pattern. However, patients with LN (especially classes I and II) may be more susceptible to non–immune complex podocyte injury (lupus podocytopathy) that shows a histologic pattern of minimal change disease (MCD) or focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGN), and is often accompanied by nephrotic range proteinuria. • • • • • Patients with active ISN class IIIA or IIIA/C often have microhematuria, hypertension, low complement levels, and proteinuria. From one fourth to one third of patients will have the nephrotic syndrome, and up to one in four will have an elevated serum creatinine . Patients with focal glomerular scarring (ISN class IIIC) usually have hypertension and reduced renal function but without active urinary sediment. Patients with mild proliferation in only a few glomeruli generally respond well to therapy, with less than 5% progressing to renal failure during 5 years of follow-up Others with more glomerular involvement or with necrotizing features and crescent formation have a prognosis similar to that of class IVA patients. • Patients with ISN class IVA have high serologic activity (low serum complement and high antidsDNA) with active urinary sediment, hypertension, heavy proteinuria, and reduced GFR. • Class IV diffuse proliferative disease carries the worst renal prognosis in most series. • Advanced sclerotic LN class VI, is usually the result of “burnt-out” class III or class IV LN. • Patients with ISN class V typically present with proteinuria and features of the nephrotic syndrome. • At biopsy, however, up to 40% will have subnephrotic proteinuria, and up to 20% will have less than 1 g/24 h of proteinuria. • Patients with ISN class V typically have less clinical renal and serologic activity. • Nephrotic ISN class V patients are predisposed to thrombotic complications, such as renal vein thrombosis and pulmonary emboli. • Ten-year renal survival rates are 75% to 85%. Histologic Prognostic Factors • Features of reversible (active) or irreversible (chronic) damage on biopsy may be able to predict the course of LN patients. • The higher activity index or chronicity index are more likely to progress to renal failure. • The renal prognosis is poor if biopsy specimens show extensive glomerulosclerosis or interstitial fibrosis. • Patients with high degrees of both activity and chronicity on biopsy (activity index >7 plus chronicity index >3) fare poorly. SURVIVAL • Fifty years ago, few patients with severe LN survived more than a few years, and half of those with even less severe forms of LN died within 5 years. • Most patients now have a response to early treatment, followed by relatively quiescent disease under continuing immunosuppression that eventually can be tapered • Some patients will continue to have no disease activity; others will relapse with time. • The frequency of relapse depends not only on the underlying disease severity, but also on the intensity and duration of continued immunosuppression. • End-stage renal disease (ESRD) now affects 8% to 15% of patients with LN. • A renal biopsy is often useful to determine whether the disease is still active and potentially treatable or all chronic and irreversibly scarred. • In patients with active LN, fatal infections, are the most common cause of death. • Studies confirm that almost half of all lupus deaths are the result of excess cardiovascular mortality, particularly from premature myocardial ischemia. • Epidemiologic predictors include race, with blacks and Hispanics having worse outcomes. • Male gender, younger age (<24 years), and lower socioeconomic statusare associated with a worse renal outcome. Agenda DEFINITION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS RENAL AND EXTRARENAL MANIFESTATIONS DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS IMMUNOLOGIC TESTS IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS PATHOLOGY OF LUPUS NEPHRITIS • The ISN/RPS biopsy classification should guide initial therapy. • patients assigned to ISN class I and class II need No therapy directed at the kidney. • The majority will have a benign long-term kidney outcome . • An exception is the group of lupus patients with lupus podocyte injury, who often respond to a short course of high-dose corticosteroids similar to patients with MCD or FSGN. TREATMENT LN AND RENAL TRANSPLANTATION • Lupus represents only 1% to 2% of patients with ESRD. • Extrarenal lupus will be inactive inpatients by the time they reach ESRD, but some may still have active extrarenal disease that requires immunosuppression while receiving renal replacement therapy. • Most centers delay transplantation until lupus activity is quiescent for 6 months. • For patients who are clinically inactive but retain serologic activity with elevated anti-DNA antibody levels, starting transplant immunosuppressives prophylactically several weeks to 1 month before living donor transplantation may suppress the serologic activity. • Allograft thrombosis(arterial , venous , or intraglomerular) may occur after transplantation, especially in patients with APA. • APA-positive patients with a prior thrombotic event should be anticoagulated shortly after transplantation. • Outcomes in SLE patients undergoing transplantation are similar to those of patients with other diseases. • Recurrent LN occurs in 2% to 11% of transplanted kidneys . • Graft Loss in recurrent disease : rare . 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