Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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We analyzed the clinicopathological features and therapy in 19 patients with kidney disease accompanied by hepatitis C viral infection, including 12 patients with mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis (including eight with IgA nephropathy), six with membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN), and one with membranous nephropathy. Persistent hematuria and/ or proteinuria (10 patients) was the most common finding, followed by nephrotic syndrome (8 patients). Cryoglobulinemia was detected in six of 19 patients examined (four of six patients with MPGN). Analysis of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-RNA genotype in 13 patients revealed that nine of them had type II genotype. All four patients with MPGN, who had serum positive for HCV-RNA, had type II genotype. Five patients were treated with interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) without a demonstrable effect on renal impairment, whereas five of 11 patients treated with steroids showed improvement of the renal impairment. During the course of steroid therapy, the serum titer of HCV-RNA decreased in 5 of 7 patients. These observations suggest that HCV infection may be associated with several forms of glomerulonephritis. Type II HCV-RNA may have a strong association with MPGN in Japan. Steroid therapy is not contraindicated in patients with HCV-associated nephropathy if they are resistant to IFN-alpha treatment.
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PMID:Clinicopathological analysis and therapy in hepatitis C virus-associated nephropathy. 884 57

We present the unusual case of 16-year-old girl who developed intractable convulsions five days after the onset of a cold. Meningeal signs, lymphopenia, proteinuria, and lupus anticoagulant were also present. Treatment with anticonvulsants, antituberculous agents, and adenine arabinoside were ineffective. The initiation of methylprednisolone pulse therapy immediately resolved convulsions and fever. The diagnosis, suggested by the clinical course and the marked improvement of the meningoencephalitis by pulse therapy, was an encephalitic form of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis. Clinical and laboratory findings indicated that an immune disorder may have triggered an abnormal response to a viral infection leading to this patient's neurologic disorder.
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PMID:Patient with both lupus anticoagulant and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis. 889 67

In renal transplantation, chronic allograft nephropathy is the leading cause of long-term graft losses, transplant glomerulopathy being its glomerular form. Differential diagnosis from recurrent or de novo membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis should be established. Whether hepatitis C virus is associated with cryoglobulinemia and glomerular damage in renal allograft recipients, as in native kidneys, is not known. We identified six hepatitis C virus-infected renal allograft recipients with proteinuria higher than 1.5 g/day, microhematuria, and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. Virologic and immunologic studies were conducted. Low serum levels of circulating immune complexes and cryoglobulins were observed, which were type II immunoglobulin G polyclonal-immunoglobulin Mk monoclonal in all six patients. Classical serum complement pathway activation and at least one type of autoantibodies were present in all of them. Hepatitis C virus RNA was found in higher concentrations in cryoprecipitate than in serum (percentage of enrichment ranged from 341 to 18,200%). Hepatitis C virus genotype was 1b in 4 of 6 patients, 1a in 1 of 6 patients, and 2a in 1 of 6 patients. In renal histology prominent parietal diffuse deposition of immunoglobulin M was the rule. Glomerular subendothelial electron-dense deposits with fibrillar appearance were observed in the two patients in which electron microscopy provided information about glomeruli. In renal allograft recipients hepatitis C virus infection may be associated with type II cryoglobulinemia which may lead to membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. Immunologic and virologic studies may help to differentiate hepatitis C virus-associated membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis from transplant glomerulopathy.
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PMID:Hepatitis C virus-associated membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis in renal allografts. 895 41

Human immunodeficiency virus-associated nephropathy (HIVAN), characterized by heavy proteinuria, rapidly progressive renal failure, "collapsing" glomerulopathy, and tubulointerstitial abnormalities, is the most common finding in HIV-infected patients undergoing a renal biopsy and predominantly affects blacks. We describe the clinical features and renal pathologic findings of 12 intravenous drug users (IVDUs) coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) who were selected for renal biopsy because they presented with features different from typical HIVAN, including hypertension, microscopic hematuria, and cryoglobulinemia. There were seven black and five Hispanic patients. Eleven patients had immune complex glomerulonephritis (ICGN); one had glomerulosclerosis with immune complex deposits. Ten individuals had evidence of past hepatitis B viral infection, but none had persistent hepatitis B surface antigenemia. No other underlying cause for immune complex glomerulonephritis was identified. Renal biopsy showed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis in five patients, mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis in five, membranous nephropathy in one, and "collapsing" glomerulopathy with immune complex deposits in one. Hepatitis C virus RNA was detected by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in the renal tissue and/or serum of nine of the 11 patients tested, and also in the renal biopsy tissue of four of eight patients with clinical and pathologic features of typical HIVAN without immunofluorescence evidence of immune complex deposits. One patient presented with renal failure, five patients developed end-stage renal disease (ESRD) requiring hemodialysis (mean time, 6.5 months), and six had stable renal function after a mean follow-up of 29.1 months (range, 2 to 72 months). Liver function abnormalities were present in seven of the 12 individuals, including four of the six patients who developed renal failure. These findings indicate that in some patients coinfected with HIV and HCV, the development of ICGN may dominate the clinical course of the disease. The occurrence of ICGN among black patients at risk for HIVAN may be related to the relatively high prevalence of HCV infection among IVDUs in this group.
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PMID:Immune complex glomerulonephritis in patients coinfected with human immunodeficiency virus and hepatitis C virus. 910 39

We report here a case of membranous glomerulonephritis associated with chronic hepatitis B (HB) virus infection and describe differential localization of HB antigens in glomeruli. The patient showed mild proteinuria and was positive for hepatitis B surface (HBs) antigen, hepatitis B envelope (HBe) antigen, and antibody to hepatitis B core (HBc) antigen in the serum. The antibody against hepatitis C was negative. A renal biopsy revealed membranous glomerulonephritis with mesangial proliferation. The immunohistochemical studies using monoclonal antibodies localized the HBe antigen along the capillary wall and the HBs antigen in the mesangial area. The immunoelectron microscopic study confirmed the localization of HB antigens: HBe antigen was located in the subepithelial and intramembranous electron dense deposits and HBs antigen in the mesangial deposits. Our present results provide the first report of the differential localization of HB antigens in glomeruli at both the light and electron microscopic levels. The differential localization of HB antigens will provide insight into the pathogenesis of membranous glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:Differential localization of s and e antigens in hepatitis B virus-associated glomerulonephritis. 924 78

Renal involvement is rare in chronic active Epstein-Barr (EB) virus infection. We report a case of a 7-year-old girl with recurrent EB virus infection. She had fever, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and persistently high titres of IgG to EB virus capsid antigen (VCA) and IgG to EB early antigen with low titres of IgM to VCA. She showed mild haematuria and proteinuria, but had no symptoms of renal failure. Renal biopsy revealed immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis, which may have been due to a persistently high titre of antibody against EB virus. In addition, a peculiar form of tubulointerstitial nephritis was found. The morphology was characterized by a papillary infolding of the tubular epithelial cell layer into the tubular lumen. The interstitium was surrounded by the infolded epithelium and contained a large number of B-cell dominant lymphocytes. EBV-encoded RNA 1 (EBER-1) gene was detected in the nuclei of some tubuloepithelial cells by in situ hybridization and may have been associated with the pathogenesis of tubulointerstitial nephritis.
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PMID:Epstein-Barr virus genome-positive tubulointerstitial nephritis associated with immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis in chronic active EB virus infection. 967

Hepatitis C viral infection occurs relatively low in Korea compared to hepatitis B. However, it progresses into chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis more frequently than HBV. It may be associated with cryoglobulinemia and glomerulonephritis, both in native and transplanted kidneys. We report three cases of membrano-proliferative glomerulonephritis type I in anti-HCV positive, but cryoglobulin-negative patients, presenting massive proteinuria, two in native kidneys and one in an allograft. HCV-RNA was positive in sera of two patients. Two were cirrhotic and ALT was mildly elevated in two. In addition to the characteristic membranoproliferative feature, two native kidneys overlapped with features of diabetic nephropathy. Immunofluorescence demonstrated mainly IgM and C3 deposits along the peripheral capillary walls. Subendothelial electron dense deposits were present in the glomeruli of all three cases with subepithelial and intramembranous deposits in two. HCV-RNA was associated not only with a greater amount of immune deposits but also with subepithelial and intramembranous deposits, indicating the role of active infection.
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PMID:Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis associated with HCV infection in native kidneys and renal allograft. 988 79

A 40-year-old white woman with end-stage renal disease from idiopathic type I membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) developed proteinuria and renal dysfunction 7 weeks after cadaveric donor renal transplantation. At the same time, a primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection was diagnosed. Complement levels were low. A renal biopsy disclosed an acute exudative proliferative glomerulonephritis with influx of polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMNs), with granular deposits of C3, C1q, IgG, and IgM. The immunofluorescence (IF) and electron microscopy (EM) findings were compatible with an early stage of a type I MPGN. CMV could not be detected in the glomeruli nor elsewhere in the kidney by IF or EM. The patient was treated with ganciclovir. In a renal biopsy 3 weeks later, the exudative lesions had disappeared, and some glomeruli now showed the characteristic lesions of a type I MPGN with an increase of mesangial cells and matrix, and reduplication of the glomerular basement membrane. Over the following period, repeated biopsies were performed. The activity of the glomerular inflammation and immune complex deposits paralleled the waxing and waning of the CMV viral load. After 10.5 months, the graft was removed because of a life-threatening systemic fungal infection. At that time, the CMV infection had cleared, and in the transplantectomy material, the membranoproliferative pattern of injury had disappeared, and in the glomeruli hardly any deposits were found. These data strongly suggest that a primary CMV virus infection can induce an apparent recurrence of type I MPGN.
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PMID:Type I membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis in a renal allograft: A recurrence induced by a cytomegalovirus infection? 1078 14

We report a case of hepatitis C virus-associated glomerulonephropathy presenting with MPO-ANCA-positive, rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis(RPGN). A 60-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for evaluation of RPGN. Laboratory evaluation revealed microhematuria, proteinuria(800 mg/day), anemia, renal failure(blood urea nitrogen 27 mg/dl, serum creatinine 2.2 mg/dl), cryoglobulinemia, hypocomplementemia, positive MPO-ANCA(232 EU), and hepatitis C virus infection(GOT 58 IU/l, GPT 38IU/l, HCV-RNA(PCR) 1,200 kcopy/ml, serotype 1). After admission, the patient's renal function and anemia deteriorated rapidly, then prednisolone(30 mg/day) was started. After treatment her renal function gradually improved, then a renal and liver biopsy was performed. The renal biopsy revealed six sclerosing fibrous crescentic glomeruli in twelve glomeruli. Immunofluorescent examination revealed granular deposits of IgG, C3, and fibrinogen along the glomerular basement membrane and mesangial matrix. The pathogenesis of RPGN in this case may relate to the deposition of immune complexes in the glomeruli because immunofluorescent examination was revealed to be the immune-complex type, but not pauci immune type nephritis. Liver histology revealed chronic active hepatitis with mild piecemeal necrosis and did not reveal vasculitis. Although her renal function was improved after treatment with prednisolone, she suffered from pulmonary manifestations(dry cough etc.) on the 120th hospital day. Suddenly she died because of pulmonary hemorrhage on the 180th hospital day. These findings suggest that various HCV-induced immunological abnormalities, such as positive MPO-ANCA, cryoglobulinemia and hypocomplementemia, play an important role in the pathogenesis of this RPGN, although we could not demonstrate deposition within glomeruli of immune complexes containing HCV. The effect of interferon therapy on such immunological abnormalities remains to be documented. Since interferon is known to have immunomodulatory effects, we selected corticosteroid therapy. Future studies need to focus on the optimal treatment strategy for hepatitis C virus-associated glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:[A case of hepatitis C virus-associated glomerulonephropathy presenting with MPO-ANCA-positive rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis]. 1089 95

We report the case of a 64-year old woman with hepatitis C virus infection, mixed cryoglobulinemia type II (IgG + IgM kappa) and cryoglobulinemic glomerulonephritis. The patient was treated with the standard dose of recombinant interferon alpha-2b (3 million units 3 times a week) for one year, resulting in complete clinical remission and undetectable levels of serum hepatitis C virus RNA. AST and ALT normalized and proteinuria decreased from 2.78 to 0.98 g/day. However, a relapse occurred when therapy was stopped. Additional therapy with interferon-alpha (5 million units 3 times a week for 9 months) resulted again in quick and prolonged remission. The clinical course of our patient showed sustained clinical and virologic response after high-dose interferon-alpha treatment confirming the usefulness of interferon alpha in treatment of patients with cryoglobulinemic glomerulonephritis. Our observation is in agreement with others, suggesting that recommended standard dosage and duration of initial treatment with interferon alpha should be re-evaluated. Although our patient had sustained virologic and clinical response after interferon alpha monotherapy, recent studies clearly support combination therapy of interferon alpha and ribavirin for treatment of chronic HCV infections.
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PMID:Complete remission of cryoglobulinemic glomerulonephritis (HCV-positive) after high dose interferon therapy. 1094 19


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