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Management of the congenital solitary kidney: consensus recommendations of the Italian Society of Pediatric Nephrology

Authors :
Claudio La Scola
Anita Ammenti
Cristina Bertulli
Monica Bodria
Milena Brugnara
Roberta Camilla
Valentina Capone
Luca Casadio
Roberto Chimenz
Maria L. Conte
Ester Conversano
Ciro Corrado
Stefano Guarino
Ilaria Luongo
Martino Marsciani
Pierluigi Marzuillo
Davide Meneghesso
Marco Pennesi
Fabrizio Pugliese
Sara Pusceddu
Elisa Ravaioli
Francesca Taroni
Gianluca Vergine
Licia Peruzzi
Giovanni Montini
La Scola, Claudio
Ammenti, Anita
Bertulli, Cristina
Bodria, Monica
Brugnara, Milena
Camilla, Roberta
Capone, Valentina
Casadio, Luca
Chimenz, Roberto
Conte, Maria L
Conversano, Ester
Corrado, Ciro
Guarino, Stefano
Luongo, Ilaria
Marsciani, Martino
Marzuillo, Pierluigi
Meneghesso, Davide
Pennesi, Marco
Pugliese, Fabrizio
Pusceddu, Sara
Ravaioli, Elisa
Taroni, Francesca
Vergine, Gianluca
Peruzzi, Licia
Montini, Giovanni
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background In recent years, several studies have been published on the prognosis of children with congenital solitary kidney (CSK), with controversial results, and a worldwide consensus on management and follow-up is lacking. In this consensus statement, the Italian Society of Pediatric Nephrology summarizes the current knowledge on CSK and presents recommendations for its management, including diagnostic approach, nutritional and lifestyle habits, and follow-up. Summary of the recommendations We recommend that any antenatal suspicion/diagnosis of CSK be confirmed by neonatal ultrasound (US), avoiding the routine use of further imaging if no other anomalies of kidney/urinary tract are detected. A CSK without additional abnormalities is expected to undergo compensatory enlargement, which should be assessed by US. We recommend that urinalysis, but not blood tests or genetic analysis, be routinely performed at diagnosis in infants and children showing compensatory enlargement of the CSK. Extrarenal malformations should be searched for, particularly genital tract malformations in females. An excessive protein and salt intake should be avoided, while sport participation should not be restricted. We recommend a lifelong follow-up, which should be tailored on risk stratification, as follows: low risk: CSK with compensatory enlargement, medium risk: CSK without compensatory enlargement and/or additional CAKUT, and high risk: decreased GFR and/or proteinuria, and/or hypertension. We recommend that in children at low-risk periodic US, urinalysis and BP measurement be performed; in those at medium risk, we recommend that serum creatinine also be measured; in high-risk children, the schedule has to be tailored according to kidney function and clinical data.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d6289f190caf3b19ed9fd423bfadf403