Impact of Time-To-Treatment on Outcomes in Autoimmune Membranous Nephropathy

Patrick Hamilton(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Sebastian Bate(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Omar Ragy(Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust), Mrityunjay Hiremath(University of Liverpool), Samar Bukhari(Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Anirudh Rao(University of Liverpool), Arif Khwaja(Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Durga Kanigicherla(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre)
Kidney International Reports
April 9, 2025
Cited by 4Open Access
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Abstract

Introduction: Despite new treatments, kidney dysfunction in autoimmune membranous nephropathy (aMN) remains challenging. Immunosuppression is initiated after "watchful-wait" to avoid side effects in patients who might achieve spontaneous remission; however, the impact of this approach on kidney function is unclear. Methods: based on baseline urinary protein-to-creatinine ratio (uPCR) and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). The analysis investigated change in eGFR based on these risk categories. Primary outcomes were spontaneous partial remission (SPR), rate of eGFR change before immunosuppression, and chronic kidney disease (CKD) stage 5 (CKD5). The secondary outcome was progression (composite of doubling serum creatinine, CKD5, and death). Cox proportional hazard models were used to assess association of outcomes with baseline categories. Results: /yr of watchful wait. In the low-risk group, 71% achieved SPR and 2.4% progressed to CKD5, whereas in the high-2 risk group, 20% achieved SPR, and 25% developed CKD5. The strongest predictor of progression to CKD5 was the eGFR at the start of immunosuppression treatment, regardless of baseline function. Conclusion: In patients with aMN requiring immunosuppression, delayed treatment leads to worse kidney outcomes. A simple categorization using baseline eGFR and uPCR can help predict spontaneous remission and potential kidney function decline.


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