Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent studies provide evidence that aldosterone (Aldo) accelerates hypertension, proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis in animal models of chronic renal failure. Although the underlying mechanisms are not well defined, Aldo may exert these deleterious renal effects by elevating renal vascular resistance (RVR) and glomerular capillary pressure (P(GC)). To test this possibility, we studied the action of Aldo on rabbit afferent (Af-) and efferent arterioles (Ef-Arts), crucial vascular segments to the control of glomerular hemodynamics. Aldo caused rapid (within 5 min) constriction in both arterioles. The constriction was not affected by spironolactone but was reproduced by membrane-impermeable albumin-conjugated Aldo, suggesting that vasoconstrictor actions are non-genomic. This notion was further supported by the finding that neither actinomycin D nor cycloheximide had effect. The vasoconstrictor action of Aldo on Af-Arts was inhibited by nifedipine (L-type calcium channel blocker), whereas that on Ef-Arts was inhibited by efonidipine (both L- and T-type calcium channel blocker) but not nifedipine. Disrupting the endothelium or nitric oxide (NO) synthesis inhibition augmented the vasoconstriction in Af-Arts, demonstrating that endothelium-derived NO modulates the vasoconstrictor actions of Aldo. Thus, Aldo causes non-genomic vasoconstriction via calcium mobilization thorough L- or T-type calcium channels in Af- or Ef-Arts, respectively. These vasoconstrictor actions on the glomerular microcirculation may play an important role in the pathophysiology and progression of renal diseases by elevating RVR and P(GC), especially when endothelium functions are impaired. In addition to our study, this review describes recent findings on the rapid cardiovascular actions of Aldo, with a particular attention to the renal hemodynamics.
Steroids 2006 Apr
PMID:Aldosterone and the kidney: rapid regulation of renal microcirculation. 1628 72

IgA glomerulonephritis accounts for 25-50% of renal biopsy diagnoses. About 25-50% of patients progress to end-stage renal disease within 20 years of diagnosis. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II type I receptor blockers slow progression of IgA nephropathy (IgAN); however, as drugs of this class are not IgAN specific and are therefore unlikely to alter significantly its natural course, many other therapeutic approaches have been proposed. Most have been tested in a relatively small number of patients and have not yet proven to be effective in the long term. Conflicting and variable data, and a lack of long-term prospective randomized studies, mean that most treatments cannot be recommended as standard therapy for IgAN. Steroids seem to be the best treatment for patients with proteinuria, as drugs in this class ameliorate this symptom and protect against deterioration of renal function. Combined treatment with corticosteroids and cytotoxic drugs has yielded interesting results in several studies, especially in progressive patients with severe IgAN. In this review, we critically analyze the data on these treatments.
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PMID:IgA glomerulonephritis: beyond angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. 1693 86

This report described an interim analysis of a investigator-driven multicenter trial in renal transplant recipients: the Prospective Quality of life Renal Transplantation Switch Study; Tacrolimus-based immunosuppression ("PQRST study"). Patients included in the trial initially treated with cyclosporine-based immunosuppression after renal transplantation who experienced side effects, such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, hypertrichosis, or other adverse reactions, were converted to a tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive regimen (n = 31). Steroids were subsequently discontinued between 3 and 6 months after the conversion. As of today 19/31 (50%) patients have been successfully weaned off steroids with the remaining patients in this process. In this interim analysis, with a follow-up ranging from 1 to 18 months both patient and graft survivals were 100%. No patient experienced an acute rejection episode; none of the grafts were lost. Blood pressure decreased in 22/31 (71%) of the patients. No patient developed de novo diabetes or other serious side effect related to the conversion. Three patients were withdrawn from the trial because of side effects: bleeding, depression, and proteinuria. However, none of these adverse events were felt to be directly related to the change of the immunosuppressive regimen to tacrolimus monotherapy. In conclusion, conversion from cyclosporine to tacrolimus-based therapy was safe and well tolerated; it may improve the cardiovascular risk profile after kidney transplantation.
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PMID:Steroid-free immunosuppression in kidney transplant recipients and prograf monotherapy: an interim analysis of a prospective multicenter trial. 1709 29

Idiopathic membranous nephropathy (IMN) remains the most common histologic entity associated with adult-onset nephrotic syndrome. The therapy for IMN is challenging. Steroids and various other immunosuppressive agents have been tried in IMN; however, current agents have not altered the course of IMN, are nonspecific and can be very toxic. In native kidneys affected by IMN, rituximab, a monoclonal antibody against the B-cell surface antigen CD20, has been shown to reduce proteinuria and prevent disease progression. In this report, we describe a 39-year-old white male with end-stage renal disease secondary to IMN that, 4 months post living unrelated kidney transplant, developed recurrent IMN with 18 g/day of proteinuria. In addition to angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor and statins, the patient was treated with 4 weekly doses of 375 mg/m2 of rituximab with significant reduction in proteinuria, a corresponding increase in serum albumin and improvement in hypercholesterolemia. At 3 years post-transplant, his kidney function remains stable with 0.5 g/day of proteinuria.
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PMID:Anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (rituximab) for the treatment of recurrent idiopathic membranous nephropathy in a renal transplant patient. 1729 27

The Mycophenolate Steroids Sparing (MYSS) study found that in renal transplant recipients who were on immunosuppressive therapy with the cyclosporine microemulsion Neoral, mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) was not better than azathioprine in preventing acute rejection at 21 mo after transplantation and was 15 times more expensive. The MYSS Follow-up Study, an extension of MYSS, was aimed at comparing long-term outcome of 248 MYSS patients according to their original randomization to MMF (1 g twice daily) or azathioprine (75 to 100 mg/d). Primary outcome was estimated GFR at 5 yr after transplantation. Mean 5-yr GFR difference between azathioprine and mycophenolate was 4.67 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) (95% confidence interval [CI] -0.43 to 9.77 ml/min per 1.73 m(2); P = 0.07). GFR from month 6 (mean +/- SEM: 54.3 +/- 1.6 versus 53.9 +/- 1.5 ml/min per 1.73 m(2); P = 0.83) to month 72 after transplantation (49.5 +/- 2.2 versus 47.3 +/- 2.4 ml/min per 1.73 m(2); P = 0.50); GFR slopes (mean +/- SEM: -1.10 +/- 0.56 versus -1.23 +/- 0.31 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) per year; P = 0.83); and 72-mo patient mortality (4.0 versus 4.0% [P = 0.95]; HR 0.96; 95% CI 0.28 to 3.31; P = 0.95), graft loss (6.8 versus 6.1% [P = 0.82]; HR 0.89; 95% CI 0.32 to 2.46; P = 0.83), incidence of persistent proteinuria (25.0 versus 27.4%; P = 0.72), late (>6 mo after transplantation) rejections (25.3 versus 21.2%; P = 0.53), and adverse events were similar on azathioprine (n = 124) and MMF (n = 124), respectively. Outcomes in the two groups were comparable also among patients with or without steroid therapy, considered separately. In kidney transplantation, the long-term risk/benefit profile of MMF and azathioprine therapy in combination with cyclosporine Neoral is similar. In view of the cost, standard immunosuppression regimens for kidney transplantation should perhaps include azathioprine rather than MMF.
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PMID:Mycophenolate mofetil versus azathioprine for prevention of chronic allograft dysfunction in renal transplantation: the MYSS follow-up randomized, controlled clinical trial. 1772 86

Steroids are still the mainstay of therapy in primary chronic glomerulonephritis (PCGN), regardless of underlying disturbance or pathology. Moreover, relationship between known abnormalities and disease manifestation is stochastic, therefore treatment continues to be empirical. It is not known whether responsiveness is related to immune phenotype. We performed flowcytometric lymphocyte (Ly) phenotyping (CD19, CD3, CD3CD4, CD3CD8, CD56/16) on 16 patients (pts) (12M, 4F), mean age 37.6+/-13 years with primary chronic glomerulonephritis (PCGN): minimal change disease (MCD)--6 pts, focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS)--4 pts, mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis--5 pts, mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis--1 pt, before and at 7 days of oral Prednisone 1 mg/kg/day (in 2 divided doses). Before steroids: 4/16 pts(25%) had elevated BP; 9/16(56.2) showed nephrotic proteinuria. Serum creatinine was >1.2 mg% in 6/16(37.5%). At 7 days WBC count increased (13,079.37+/-4966.4/microl vs. 8021.25+/-2077.4/microl; p=0.0007), Ly percentage (%) decreased (20.30+/-9% vs. 29.9+/-10.4%; p=0.0095), while absolute (abs.) Ly count remained unchanged. Both CD19 Ly% and CD19 Ly abs. count increased (16.13+/-6.5% vs. 9.52+/-3.7%; p=0.0015, and 410.012+/-29.7/microl vs. 223.56+/-123.8/microl; p=0.0077, respectively). NK (natural killer)% decreased (9.15+/-5.2% vs. 14.19+/-7.1%; p=0.0296). CD3, CD3CD4, CD3CD8 Ly subsets and CD4/CD8 ratio showed no change. Variation in proteinuria (2.88+/-2.1 g/24 h vs. 3.45+/-1.7 g/24 h; p=0.4) did not reach statistical significance (Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney). In 11 pts we performed an additional analysis at 1 month. Compared to levels before steroids, there was an increase in WBC, CD19 Ly% and CD19 Ly abs. count and a decrease in NK% and NK abs. count. Other Ly subsets and CD4/CD8 ratio remained unchanged. Variation in clinical parameters (proteinuria, serum Creatinine, BP) did not reach statistical significance. Changes in Ly profile precede changes in clinical parameters and thus are divergent. While our patients proved to be early non-responders, further studies to elucidate whether profile changes provide for response specification are warranted.
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PMID:The effect of steroids on lymphocyte profile in primary chronic glomerulonephritis. Empirical or tailored therapy? 1763 Feb 6

Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) is an immunosuppressive drug successfully used for the prevention of acute and chronic rejection of renal allografts, as well as in the therapy of glomerular disorders. We treated three groups of patients with lupus nephritis: the first group of patients had a high histologic activity index (AI), 13.4 +/- 2.34; the second group of patients had a high histologic chronicity index (CI), 6.0 +/- 0.7; and the third group consisted of only two patients, one with low AI (3.5) and another with low CI (1.5). The patients were treated for 2 years. MMF was initiated at a dose of 2 g/daily for the first 6 months and the dose was decreased to 1.5 g/daily for the further 18 months. Steroids, 0.4 mg/kg/day, were the concomitant therapy for the first 6 months, with slow tapering for the further 18 months. Patients with high AI presented significant decrease of serum creatinine after 2 years, 286 +/- 112.95 to 131.2 +/- 44.65 micromol/L. Two of the patients, with acute oligoanuria, were withdrawn from dialysis treatment. Significant improvement was also noted, 6.97 +/- 1.81 to 0.9 +/- 0.31 g/day. Patients with high CI had nonsignificant decrease of serum creatinine, 178.5 +/- 47.73 to 129.25 +/- 22.88 micromol/L, and significant improvement of proteinuria, 4.63 +/- 1.57 to 1.14 +/- 0.39 g/day. The patient with low AI showed recovery of renal function (serum creatinine from 196 to 72 micromol/L) and alleviation of proteinuria, 7.93 to 3.4 g/day. The patient with low CI did not respond to the therapy and renal function slowly worsened. MMF has emerged as a promising therapeutic approach for both the induction and maintenance phase in patients with lupus nephritis.
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PMID:Role of mycophenolate mofetil in the treatment of lupus nephritis. 1791 58

The idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (INS) of childhood is characterized chiefly by a remitting and relapsing course and its striking susceptibility to corticosteroid therapy. We report a case of relapsing nephrotic syndrome associated with urinary tract infection (UTI) treated with pefloxacin, which is a fluoro-quinolone derivative, in a dose of 800 mg per day. Steroids were avoided because of associated UTI. The UTI responded well and proteinuria disappeared after ten days of treatment with pefloxacin. However, the patient developed arthralgia involving the ankles, the knees and the neck. At this juncture, the drug was discontinued resulting in complete cessation of the joint pain. Pefloxacin increases the production of interleukin-2, a cytokine whose metabolism is modified during nephrotic syndrome. It has been used earlier in children with INS with equivocal results. The toxicity of quinolones for the joints seems more frequent in children, whose cartilage is immature and several cases have been reported. Studies on a larger number of patients are required before drawing any firm conclusions on the usefulness of pefloxacin in the treatment of INS.
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PMID:Pefloxacin in the treatment of childhood nephrotic syndrome: a case report. 1841 14

Incidence of cardiovascular complications, cancers and chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) suggests reduction of immunosuppressive dosages. Some studies analyzed the effects of minimization of immunosuppression until the avoidance of immunosuppressive drugs. However minimization seems to be related to a higher incidence of acute rejection. Induction of tolerance after transplantation and use of immunological tests that could monitor the immune reactivity are required. The aim of this study is to evaluate immunological state in a group of recipients after deceased and living donor kidney transplantation and to minimize immunosuppressive therapy monitoring simultaneously clinical and immunological parameters. We analyzed 41 patients, 38 from deceased donors and 3 from living donor kidney transplantation. All patients were treated with triple immunosuppressive therapy: cyclosporine or sirolimus or tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil and steroids. In all recipients the presence of CD8+CD28- T suppressor cells (Ts) was analyzed. Patients were divided in 2 groups, according to the presence of Ts. In patients with Ts, (Group A, n=19), mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) was progressively reduced and then stopped. Steroids were subsequently reduced and then interrupted, maintaining an immunosuppressive therapy with low doses of calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) or sirolimus (SIR). 22 patients were without presence of Ts: we enrolled for the study only patient acute rejection free, without proteinuria and with creatinine levels stable (Group B, n=19). In these patients, MMF was reduced and then stopped, while steroids were decreased to 5 mg at alternate days, maintaining CNI or SIR at medium therapeutic dosages (minimized therapy). Patient and graft overall survival in Group A and in Group B were respectively at 100% and 94.7%. Incidence of acute rejection was respectively at 0% in group A and 15.7% in Group B. Presence of episodes of acute rejection in Group B confirms risk of later minimization of steroids and the relevance of the analysis of recipient immunological reactivity before modification of immunosuppressive therapy. A careful evaluation of recipient immune reactivity with the presence of T regulatory cells can allow adequate and personalized immunosuppressive regimens, without high risks of acute rejection.
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PMID:Minimization of immunosuppressive therapy and immunological monitoring of kidney transplant recipients with long-term allograft survival. 1877 59

The treatment of recurrent glomerulonephritis (GN) is often empirical. Plasmapheresis has received the largest consensus for the treatment of focal glomerular sclerosis (FGS), whether associated with cyclophosphamide and steroids or not. To be effective, such therapy needs to be started as quickly as possible after the onset of proteinuria, and prolonged for months when recovery is delayed. Plasmapheresis and cyclophosphamide have also been used to treat GNs with glomerular crescents. However, there has been no consensus on the efficacy of such therapy. The recently introduced rituximab is the most innovative drug but also the most experimental. So far, it has been used for the treatment of ANCA-associated vasculitis, FGS and membranous GN, with results that are still under debate. Cyclophosphamide has been used in patients with severe recurrent GN, but the anedoctal cases described prevent us from drawing any firm conclusions. Steroids have been used for the treatment of many recurrent GNs, but yet again, without any standard protocol. They have been used both in children with FGS and in adults with aggressive GN or severe proteinuria. Both ACE inhibitors and angiotensinreceptor blockers have been suggested as first-line therapy in recurrent GN with proteinuria. This therapy is safe and can be even more effective than others. Finally, it must be kept in mind that the addition of immunosuppression in transplant patients can dramatically increase the risk of infective complications. Moreover, recurrent GNs are often associated with chronic allograft diseases that can cause graft worsening independently of any therapy.
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PMID:[Treatment of post-transplant glomerulonephritis]. 1904 93


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