Methylprednisolone Therapy for Acute Crescentic Rapidly Progressive Glomerulonephritis

Kline Bolton(University of Virginia), Benjamin C. Sturgill
American Journal of Nephrology
October 28, 2008
Cited by 107

Abstract

In the last 10 years we have evaluated 63 patients with acute crescentic rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (AC-RPGN), 46 of whom received pulse methylprednisolone (PM). The groups consisted of patients with no immune deposits, immune complexes, vasculitis, and antiglomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) disease. Seventy-nine percent of non-anti-GBM patients improved versus 25% of unpulsed, p less than 0.005; 70% stopped dialysis (D) versus none of unpulsed, p less than 0.009; creatinine decreased from 8.6 before to 2.7 mg/dl after PM, p less than 0.05. Percent crescents and oligoanuria did not influence PM results, but did with conventional therapy (prednisone, cytotoxics, anticoagulants, supportive treatment). Seventeen percent of anti-GBM patients improved, none stopped D. In anti-GBM patients, serum creatinine less than 6 mg/dl was associated with a favorable response to PM, p = 0.045. Twenty-one percent of responding patients lost function at 19.8 months. The long-term response for non-anti-GBM patients was 62%. Patients with low chronicity on biopsy had shorter duration of disease (p = 0.006) and 92% initial, 85% long-term improvement; those with high chronicity had an immediate 71%, and 36% long-term response rate, p less than 0.02. Thus, PM is effective and appears superior to conventional therapy in treatment of non-anti-GBM AC-RPGN.


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