Long-Term Outcome of Steroid-Resistant Nephrotic Syndrome in Children

Agnes Trautmann(Heidelberg University), Sven Schnaidt(Heidelberg University), Beata S. Lipska‐Ziętkiewicz, Monica Bodria(University of Parma), Fatih Özaltın(Hacettepe University), Francesco Emma(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Ali Anarat(Cukurova University), Anette Melk(Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), Marta Azócar(Hospital Luis Calvo Mackenna), Jun Oh(Kinderkrebs-Zentrum Hamburg), Bassam Saeed(Damascus Hospital), Alaleh Gheisari, Salim Çalışkan(Istanbul University), Jutta Gellermann(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Lina María Serna-­Higuita(Hospital Pablo Tobon Uribe), Augustina Jankauskienė(Vilnius University), Dorota Drożdż(Jagiellonian University), Sevgı Mır(Ege University), Ayşe Balat(Gaziantep University), Maria Szczepańska(Silesian Center for Heart Disease), Dušan Paripović(University Children's Hospital, Belgrade), Aleksandra Żurowska(Gdańsk Medical University), Radovan Bogdanović(Institute of Public Health of Serbia), Alev Yılmaz(Istanbul University), Bruno Ranchin(Hôpital Femme Mère Enfant), Esra Baskın(Başkent University Hospital), Özlem Erdoğan(Dr Sami Ulus Çocuk Sağlığı ve Hastalıkları Eğitim ve Araştırma Hastanesi), Giuseppe Remuzzi(University of Milan), Piotr Adamczyk(Provincial Polyclinical Hospital in Toruń), Elżbieta Kuźma-Mroczkowska(Medical University of Warsaw), Mieczysław Litwin, Luisa Murer, Marcin Tkaczyk(Polish Mother’s Memorial Hospital Research Institute), Helena Jardim(Centro Hospitalar do Porto), Anna Wasilewska(University Clinical Hospital In Bialystok), Nikoleta Printza(Hippocration General Hospital), Kibriya Fidan(Gazi University), Eva Šimková(Dubai Hospital), Halina Borzęcka(Medical University of Lublin), Hagen Staude(University of Rostock), Katharina Hees(Heidelberg University), Franz Schaefer(Heidelberg University)
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
May 31, 2017
Cited by 217Open Access
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Abstract

We investigated the value of genetic, histopathologic, and early treatment response information in prognosing long-term renal outcome in children with primary steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome. From the PodoNet Registry, we obtained longitudinal clinical information for 1354 patients (disease onset at >3 months and <20 years of age): 612 had documented responsiveness to intensified immunosuppression (IIS), 1155 had kidney biopsy results, and 212 had an established genetic diagnosis. We assessed risk factors for ESRD using multivariate Cox regression models. Complete and partial remission of proteinuria within 12 months of disease onset occurred in 24.5% and 16.5% of children, respectively, with the highest remission rates achieved with calcineurin inhibitor-based protocols. Ten-year ESRD-free survival rates were 43%, 94%, and 72% in children with IIS resistance, complete remission, and partial remission, respectively; 27% in children with a genetic diagnosis; and 79% and 52% in children with histopathologic findings of minimal change glomerulopathy and FSGS, respectively. Five-year ESRD-free survival rate was 21% for diffuse mesangial sclerosis. IIS responsiveness, presence of a genetic diagnosis, and FSGS or diffuse mesangial sclerosis on initial biopsy as well as age, serum albumin concentration, and CKD stage at onset affected ESRD risk. Our findings suggest that responsiveness to initial IIS and detection of a hereditary podocytopathy are prognostic indicators of favorable and poor long-term outcome, respectively, in children with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome. Children with multidrug-resistant sporadic disease show better renal survival than those with genetic disease. Furthermore, histopathologic findings may retain prognostic relevance when a genetic diagnosis is established.


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