Circulating suPAR in Two Cohorts of Primary FSGS

Changli Wei(University of Miami), Howard Trachtman(NYU Langone Health), Jing Li(University of Miami), Chuanhui Dong(University of Miami), Aaron L. Friedman(University of Minnesota), Jennifer Gassman(Cleveland Clinic), June L. McMahan(Cleveland Clinic), Milena Radeva(Cleveland Clinic), Karsten M. Heil(Heidelberg University), Agnes Trautmann(Heidelberg University), Ali Anarat(Cukurova University), Sevinç Emre(NYU Langone Health), Gian Marco Ghiggeri(University of Miami), Fatih Özaltın(University of Minnesota), Dieter Haffner(Cleveland Clinic), Debbie S. Gipson(Heidelberg University), Frederick J. Kaskel(Yeshiva University), Dagmar-Christiane Fischer(NYU Langone Health), Franz Schaefer(Heidelberg University), Jochen Reiser(Rush University Medical Center)
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
November 9, 2012
Cited by 219Open Access
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Abstract

Overexpression of soluble urokinase receptor (suPAR) causes pathology in animal models similar to primary FSGS, and one recent study demonstrated elevated levels of serum suPAR in patients with the disease. Here, we analyzed circulating suPAR levels in two cohorts of children and adults with biopsy-proven primary FSGS: 70 patients from the North America-based FSGS clinical trial (CT) and 94 patients from PodoNet, the Europe-based consortium studying steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome. Circulating suPAR levels were elevated in 84.3% and 55.3% of patients with FSGS patients in the CT and PodoNet cohorts, respectively, compared with 6% of controls (P<0.0001); inflammation did not account for this difference. Multiple regression analysis suggested that lower suPAR levels associated with higher estimated GFR, male sex, and treatment with mycophenolate mofetil. In the CT cohort, there was a positive association between the relative reduction of suPAR after 26 weeks of treatment and reduction of proteinuria, with higher odds for complete remission (P=0.04). In the PodoNet cohort, patients with an NPHS2 mutation had higher suPAR levels than those without a mutation. In conclusion, suPAR levels are elevated in geographically and ethnically diverse patients with FSGS and do not reflect a nonspecific proinflammatory milieu. The associations between a change in circulating suPAR with different therapeutic regimens and with remission support the role of suPAR in the pathogenesis of FSGS.


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