Pathologic Classification of Diabetic Nephropathy

Thijs W. Cohen Tervaert(Leiden University Medical Center), Antien L. Mooyaart(Leiden University Medical Center), Kerstin Amann(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Arthur H. Cohen(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), H. Terence Cook(Hammersmith Hospital), Cinthia B. Drachenberg(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Franco Ferrario(Ospedale San Carlo), Agnes B. Fogo, Mark Haas(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Emile de Heer, Kensuke Joh(Sendai City Hospital), Laure Hélène Noël(Université Paris Cité), Jai Radhakrishnan(Columbia University), Surya V. Seshan(Cornell University), Ingeborg M. Bajema, Jan A. Bruijn
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
February 18, 2010
Cited by 1,669

Abstract

Although pathologic classifications exist for several renal diseases, including IgA nephropathy, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, and lupus nephritis, a uniform classification for diabetic nephropathy is lacking. Our aim, commissioned by the Research Committee of the Renal Pathology Society, was to develop a consensus classification combining type1 and type 2 diabetic nephropathies. Such a classification should discriminate lesions by various degrees of severity that would be easy to use internationally in clinical practice. We divide diabetic nephropathy into four hierarchical glomerular lesions with a separate evaluation for degrees of interstitial and vascular involvement. Biopsies diagnosed as diabetic nephropathy are classified as follows: Class I, glomerular basement membrane thickening: isolated glomerular basement membrane thickening and only mild, nonspecific changes by light microscopy that do not meet the criteria of classes II through IV. Class II, mesangial expansion, mild (IIa) or severe (IIb): glomeruli classified as mild or severe mesangial expansion but without nodular sclerosis (Kimmelstiel-Wilson lesions) or global glomerulosclerosis in more than 50% of glomeruli. Class III, nodular sclerosis (Kimmelstiel-Wilson lesions): at least one glomerulus with nodular increase in mesangial matrix (Kimmelstiel-Wilson) without changes described in class IV. Class IV, advanced diabetic glomerulosclerosis: more than 50% global glomerulosclerosis with other clinical or pathologic evidence that sclerosis is attributable to diabetic nephropathy. A good interobserver reproducibility for the four classes of DN was shown (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.84) in a test of this classification.


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