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1.
Rev. nefrol. diál. traspl ; 41(3): 202-206, set. 2021. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1377144

ABSTRACT

Abstract Proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits is defined as membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis like injury with monotypic Ig deposits restricted to a single light chain isotype.Here we present a patient who presented with hypocomplementemia and nephrotic syndrome, who was initially diagnosed with proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits. He developed disseminated tuberculosis after a brief course of immunosuppression. Successful treatment of tuberculosis resulted in the complete remission of glomerular disease and the disappearance of monoclonal protein. Hence, we believe he had Tuberculosis-related proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits. Treatment strategies have not been structured due to the rarity of the condition and lack of randomized trials. However, expert opinion suggests clone-based therapy. proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits with a benign course without clone-based therapy has been reported. Patients seldom respond to classic immunosuppressants. Even some cases experience slowly progressive disease under angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition alone. There are also cases secondary to viral infections. Our case and the particular "benign" cases lead us to an intriguing proposition that proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits might not be a single disease. A subset of patients may be experiencing infection-related or post-infectious glomerulonephritis presenting as proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits.


Resumen La lesión similar a la glomerulonefritis membranoproliferativa con depósitos de Ig monotípicos restringidos a un isotipo de cadena ligera única se conoce actualmente como glomerulonefritis proliferativa con depósitos de inmunoglobulina monoclonal. A continuación presentamos a un paciente que presentó hipocomplementemia y síndrome nefrótico, al que inicialmente se le diagnosticó glomerulonefritis proliferativa con depósitos de inmunoglobulina monoclonal. Desarrolló tuberculosis diseminada después de un breve curso de inmunosupresión. El tratamiento exitoso de la tuberculosis dio como resultado la remisión completa de la enfermedad glomerular y la desaparición de la proteína monoclonal. Por lo tanto, creemos que tenía glomerulonefritis proliferativa con depósitos de inmunoglobulina monoclonal relacionada con tuberculosis diseminada. Las estrategias de tratamiento no se han estructurado debido a la rareza de la afección y la falta de ensayos aleatorios. Sin embargo, la opinión de los expertos sugiere una terapia basada en clones. Se ha informado de glomerulonefritis proliferativa con depósitos de inmunoglobulina monoclonal con un curso benigno sin terapia basada en clones. Los pacientes rara vez responden a los inmunosupresores clásicos. Incluso algunos casos experimentan una enfermedad de progresión lenta solo con la inhibición de la enzima convertidora de angiotensina. También hay casos secundarios a infecciones virales. Nuestro caso y los casos "benignos" particulares nos llevan a la propuesta intrigante de que la glomerulonefritis proliferativa con depósitos de inmunoglobulina monoclonal podría no ser una sola enfermedad. Un subgrupo de pacientes puede estar experimentando glomerulonefritis postinfecciosa o relacionada con una infección que se presenta como glomerulonefritis proliferativa con depósitos de inmunoglobulina monoclonal.

2.
Chinese Medical Journal ; (24): 1723-1732, 2019.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-802631

ABSTRACT

Objective@#Cryoglobulinemia often causes systemic vasculitis, thereby damaging to skin and internal organs including kidneys, even life-threatening. This review aimed to introduce the advances in understanding, detection, and treatment of this disease in recent years, with a particular concern to clinical practice.@*Data sources@#All the data in this review were from the English or Chinese literature in the PubMed and China National Knowledge Infrastructure databases as of March 2019.@*Study selection@#This review selected important original articles, meaningful reviews, and some reports on cryoglobulinemia published in recent years and in history, as well as the guidelines for treatment of underlying diseases which lead to cryoglobulinemia.@*Results@#Diagnosis of cryoglobulinemia relies on serum cryoglobulin test, in which to ensure that the blood sample temperature is not less than 37°C in the entire pre-analysis phase is the key to avoid false negative results. Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis (Cryo Vas), including cryoglobulinemic glomerulonephritis (Cryo GN), usually occurs in types II and III mixed cryoglobulinemia, and can also be seen in type I cryoglobulinemia caused by monoclonal IgG3 or IgG1. Skin purpura, positive serum rheumatoid factor, and decreased serum levels of C4 and C3 are important clues for prompting types II and III Cryo Vas. Renal biopsy is an important means for diagnosis of Cryo GN, while membranous proliferative GN is the most common pathological type of Cryo GN. In recent years, great advances have been made in the treatment of Cryo Vas and its underlying diseases, and this review has briefly introduced these advances.@*Conclusions@#Laboratory examinations of serum cryoglobulins urgently need standardization. The recent advances in the diagnosis and treatment of Cryo Vas and GN need to be popularized among the clinicians in related disciplines.

3.
Cuad. Hosp. Clín ; 58(2): 35-40, 2017. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-972850

ABSTRACT

El Mieloma Múltiple (MM) es la gammapatia monoclonal (GM) que más frecuentemente compromete la función renal, no obstante, un número creciente de enfermedades renales asociadas a GM están siendo reconocidas. Las GM son un conjunto de entidades caracterizadas por la producción anómala y secreción a la sangre de una inmunoglobulina (Ig) monoclonal (de un mismo clon de células plasmáticas) o un fragmento de la misma (cadenas pesadas, ligeras o ambas) que puede depositarse en los órganos de forma organizada como cristales, fibrillas o microtúbulos, o de forma no organizada (granular). Esta Ig llega a depositarse principalmente en el riñón, no sólo porque es un órgano muy vascularizado, sino también porque el túbulo renal tiene un papel predominante en el metabolismo de las Igs. El diagnóstico del compromiso renal ha sufrido cambios en las últimas décadas, siendo cada vez más certero debido al desarrollo e implementación rutinaria de distintas técnicas de laboratorio (tinciones con anticuerpos específicos contra cadenas ligeras kappa y lambda, estudio con microscopia electrónica (ME) y el desarrollo de técnicas cada vez más sensibles para detectar el componente monoclonal en sangre u orina). El compromiso renal en estas patologías frecuentemente se asocia a GM malignas, generalmente asociadas a depósitos de cadenas ligeras. Cada vez son más los casos de disfunción renal asociados a GM, y en muchos de estos es evidente el progreso a enfermedad renal terminal y con altas tasas de recurrencia después del transplante renal.


Multiple myeloma (MM) is the monoclonal gammopathy (MG) that most frequently compromises renal function; however, a growing number of renal diseases associated with monoclonal gammopathies are being recognized. Monoclonal gammopathies (MG) are a set of entities characterized by the abnormal production and secretion into the blood of a monoclonal immunoglobulin (Ig) from a single clone of plasma cells or a fragment thereof (heavy, light chains orboth) which can be deposited in the organs in an organized way such as crystals, fibrils or microtubules, orin an unorganized (granular) form. This Ig is mainly deposited in the kidney, not only because it is a very vascularized organ, but also because the renal tubule plays a predominant role in the metabolism of Igs. The diagnosis of renal involvement has undergone changes in the last decades, being more and more certain due to the development and routine implementation of different laboratory techniques (stains with specific antibodies against kappa and lambda light chains, study with electron microscopy (EM), development of increasingly sensitive techniques for detecting the monoclonal component in blood or urine). Renal involvement in these pathologies is often associated with malignant MG, generally associated with light chain deposits. Increasingly, there are cases of renal dysfunction associated with MG, and progression to terminal renal disease and high rates of recurrence after renal transplantation are evident in many of these.


Subject(s)
Humans , Kidney Diseases , Muscle Hypotonia/congenital
4.
Laboratory Medicine Online ; : 127-132, 2015.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-20548

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The heavy-light chain (HLC) quantitative test can identify and quantify the heavy and light chains of each immunoglobulin class. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the HLC quantitative test. METHODS: To evaluate the effectiveness of the HLC quantitative test, a systemic review of the literature, using Ovid-MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane library, and eight domestic databases including KoreaMed, was performed until October 10, 2013. We included five cohort studies and one diagnostic evaluation study in the final evaluation. Two reviewers independently assessed the quality of the included studies and extracted data from the studies. The quality of the studies was assessed according to the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) tool. RESULTS: A correlation between the HLC quantitative test and previous assays was evaluated in one study, which enrolled patients with increased monoclonal IgA. The correlation coefficient was reported as 0.94 in this study. The clinical significance of the quantitative HLC test to predict a prognosis was also reported in five cohort studies. The survival rate in patients with higher HLC ratio was significantly lower and the increased IgA kappa/lambda ratio or IgM kappa/lambda ratio was significantly correlated with higher survival rate in patients with monoclonal gammaglobulinemia. CONCLUSIONS: The HLC quantitative test is an effective test that can quantitatively measure the identified immunoglobulin type and predict the prognosis of patients with monoclonal gammopathy.


Subject(s)
Humans , Cohort Studies , Immunoglobulin A , Immunoglobulin M , Immunoglobulins , Paraproteinemias , Prognosis , Survival Rate
5.
Acta méd. colomb ; 39(2): 196-201, abr.-jun. 2014. ilus, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: lil-720233

ABSTRACT

La nefropatía asociada a las gammapatías monoclonales es debida principalmente al depósito de cadenas ligeras. Las enfermedades renales paraproteinémicas son lesiones asociadas con depósito de inmunoglobulinas intactas o fragmentos de inmunoglobulinas (cadenas pesadas y cadenas ligeras). La enfermedad por depósito de cadenas ligeras es una condición rara, caracterizada por el depósito de cadenas ligeras monoclonales en muchos órganos y a nivel renal predominantemente en glomérulos y membranas basales tubulares. La enfermedad está frecuentemente asociada con desórdenes linfoproliferativos, y la mayoría de casos son causados por depósito de cadenas ligeras kappa. Aunque se presenta sobre todo en cuadros malignos, en ocasiones no se detecta patología hematológica y se denomina idiopática o "primaria". Suele manifestarse como una insuficiencia renal severa con proteinuria nefrótica, no tiene tratamiento claramente establecido y el pronóstico es malo. Se describen las características clínicas e histológicas del segundo caso informado en Colombia de nefropatía por depósito de cadenas ligeras diagnosticado en el contexto de una enfermedad renal paraproteinémica sin datos de malignidad. (Acta Med Colomb 2014; 39: 196-201).


Nephropathy associated with monoclonal gammopathies is mainly due to light chain deposition. The paraproteinemic kidney diseases are lesions associated with deposition of intact immunoglobulins or fragments of immunoglobulins (heavy and light chains). The disease due to deposition of light chains is a rare condition characterized by deposition of monoclonal light chains in many organs and as for the kidney, predominantly in glomeruli and tubular basement membranes. The disease is frequently associated with lymphoproliferative disorders and the majority of cases are caused by deposition of kappa light chains. Although presented primarily in clinical pictures of malignancy, sometimes no hematological pathology is detected and is called idiopathic or "primary". It usually manifests as severe renal failure with nephrotic proteinuria, has not a clearly established treatment and the prognosis is poor. The clinical and histological features of the second case reported in Colombia of a light chain deposition nephropathy diagnosed in the context of a kidney paraproteinemic disease without malignancy data, is presented. (Acta Med Colomb 2014; 39: 196-201).


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Middle Aged , Immunoglobulins , Immunoglobulin Fragments , Paraproteinemias , Proteinuria , Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance , Chondrocalcinosis , Renal Insufficiency , Lymphoproliferative Disorders
6.
Clinical Medicine of China ; (12): 1063-1066, 2014.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-474968

ABSTRACT

Objective To report 1 case with renal immunoglobulin light and heavy chain deposited disease (IgG-κ light chain and γ1 heavy chain).Methods The clinical manifestations,serum immunofixation electrophoresis,light and heavy chain abnormalities of blood and urine,bone marrow biopsy and renal biopsy data laboratory data were recorded and analyzed.Results A 63-year-old woman presented with massive proteinuria,microscopic hematuria,hypertension,anemia and serum IgG-κ light chain.Bone marrow aspirate revealed 4% plasma cells.Renal biopsy revealed nodular glomerulopathy with congo red staining-negative.Immunofluorescence showed that κ light chain and IgG1 (γ1 heavy chain) were deposited along the glomerular basement membranes (GBM) and tubular basement membranes (TBM).Electron-microscopy revealed electrondense deposits that delineate the outer aspect of TBM and endothelial aspect of GBM.Conclusion The diagnosis of renal immunoglobulin light and heavy chain deposited disease (IgG-κ light chain and γ1 heavy chain) should be addressed combine with clinical and is pathology,especially with immune pathological examination.

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