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A multicenter retrospective study of calcineurin inhibitors in nephrotic syndrome secondary to podocyte gene variants

Authors :
Georgia Malakasioti
Daniela Iancu
Anastasiia Milovanova
Alexey Tsygin
Tomoko Horinouchi
China Nagano
Kandai Nozu
Koichi Kamei
Shuichiro Fujinaga
Kazumoto Iijima
Rajiv Sinha
Biswanath Basu
William Morello
Giovanni Montini
Aoife Waters
Olivia Boyer
Zeynep Yürük Yıldırım
Sibel Yel
İsmail Dursun
Hugh J. McCarthy
Marina Vivarelli
Larisa Prikhodina
Martine T.P. Besouw
Eugene Yu-hin Chan
Wenyan Huang
Markus J. Kemper
Sebastian Loos
Chanel Prestidge
William Wong
Galia Zlatanova
Rasmus Ehren
Lutz T. Weber
Hassib Chehade
Nakysa Hooman
Marcin Tkaczyk
Małgorzata Stańczyk
Michael Miligkos
Kjell Tullus
Source :
Kidney International, 103(5), 962-972. ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

While 44-83% of children with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) without a proven genetic cause respond to treatment with a calcineurin inhibitor (CNI), current guidelines recommend against the use of immunosuppression in monogenic SRNS. This is despite existing evidence suggesting that remission with CNI treatment is possible and can improve prognosis in some cases of monogenic SRNS. Herein, our retrospective study assessed response frequency, predictors of response and kidney function outcomes among children with monogenic SRNS treated with a CNI for at least three months. Data from 203 cases (age 0-18 years) were collected from 37 pediatric nephrology centers. Variant pathogenicity was reviewed by a geneticist, and 122 patients with a pathogenic and 19 with a possible pathogenic genotype were included in the analysis. After six months of treatment and at last visit, 27.6% and 22.5% of all patients respectively, demonstrated partial or full response. Achievement of at least partial response at six months of treatment conferred a significant reduction in kidney failure risk at last follow-up compared to no response (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval] 0.25, [0.10-0.62]). Moreover, risk of kidney failure was significantly lower when only those with a follow-up longer than two years were considered (hazard ratio 0.35, [0.14-0.91]). Higher serum albumin level at CNI initiation was the only factor related to increased likelihood of significant remission at six months (odds ratio [95% confidence interval] 1.16, [1.08-1.24]). Thus, our findings justify a treatment trial with a CNI also in children with monogenic SRNS.

Details

ISSN :
00852538
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c1f5fe17f4f65dd8ec93921bf7e5d2ca
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2023.02.022