Anti-slit diaphragm antibodies on kidney biopsy identify pediatric patients with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome responsive to second-line immunosuppressants

Valentina Raglianti(Meyer Children's Hospital), Maria Lucia Angelotti(University of Florence), Luigi Cirillo(Meyer Children's Hospital), Fiammetta Ravaglia(Hospital of Prato), Samuela Landini(Meyer Children's Hospital), Viviana Palazzo(Meyer Children's Hospital), Maria Elena Melica(University of Florence), Giulia Antonelli(University of Florence), Carolina Conte(University of Florence), Elisa Buti(Meyer Children's Hospital), Carmela Errichiello(Meyer Children's Hospital), Letizia De Chiara(University of Florence), Anna Julie Peired(University of Florence), Laura Lasagni(University of Florence), Anna Maria Buccoliero(Meyer Children's Hospital), Marco Allinovi(Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Careggi), Anna Montero(Bellvitge University Hospital), Josep M. Cruzado(Bellvitge University Hospital), Maurizio Bruschi(Istituto Giannina Gaslini), Gian Marco Ghiggeri(Istituto Giannina Gaslini), Andrea Angeletti(Istituto Giannina Gaslini), Hans‐Joachim Anders(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Elena Lazzeri(University of Florence), Benedetta Mazzinghi(Meyer Children's Hospital), Francesca Becherucci(Meyer Children's Hospital), Paola Romagnani(Meyer Children's Hospital)
Kidney International
October 3, 2024
Cited by 60Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Podocytopathies represent a group of glomerular disorders associated with minimal changes (MC) or focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) lesion patterns at biopsy and heterogeneous responses to steroids. Anti-nephrin antibodies were previously found in such patients, suggesting an autoimmune form of podocytopathy. High resolution confocal microscopy on kidney biopsies of a cohort of 128 pediatric patients revealed localization of IgG along the slit diaphragm in 30% of patients with MC and 25% of those with FSGS, but not in other lesion patterns. Anti-nephrin IgG ELISA assay in the serum and stimulated emission depletion microscopy of kidney biopsies showed IgG-nephrin co-localization only in 77.8% of cases. Similar observations were obtained in a cohort of 48 adult patients with MC or FSGS at kidney biopsy, where IgG-nephrin colocalization was only 44.4%, suggesting the existence of autoantibodies binding to other slit proteins. Patients with anti-slit antibodies showed nephrotic syndrome at onset in 94.4% of cases. Patients with primary steroid-resistance had anti-slit antibodies in 27%, while those with secondary steroid-resistance in 87.5% of cases, irrespective of the histopathological lesion pattern. Steroid-resistant patients with anti-slit antibodies responded to second-line immunosuppressants in 92.3% vs. only 20% of patients that were anti-slit negative. No patient with anti-slit antibodies developed kidney failure vs. 51.7% of those negative for antibodies (66.7% with a genetic cause and 41.2% with a non-genetic cause). Thus, the detection of anti-slit antibodies can identify patients with an autoimmune podocytopathy responsive to treatment with second-line immunosuppressants, irrespective of the histopathological lesion pattern at biopsy.


Related Papers