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)

Sixteen renal transplant (RT) patients (10 men, 6 women, aged 49 +/- 10 years) with chronic hepatitis C received alpha interferon (IFN alpha) therapy (Intron A, Schering Plough) at a dose of 3 x 10(6) units s.c. 3 times a week, scheduled for 24 consecutive weeks. At the beginning of the study all had a stable renal function since at least 12 months (mean serum creatinine -SCr- 121 +/- 38 mmol/l). Fourteen patients were receiving cyclosporin A (CsA) either alone (1) or in combination with steroids and/or azathioprine -AZA- (double therapy: 8; triple therapy: 5); two patients were on conventional therapy. The mean daily doses of CsA were 2.6 mg/kd i.e. a mean whole blood trough level of 104 ng/ml. Six patients experienced renal failure either acute (5) or subacute (1) within 7 to 24 weeks after the start of IFN alpha therapy. Their mean SCr increased from 105 +/- 31 mmol/l to 207 +/- 63 mmol/l (p = 0.02) with de-novo proteinuria in one case (1 g/d) and an increase in pre-existing proteinuria in 2; 3 remained without proteinuria. The histological study showed in all cases a diffuse interstitial edema associated with dilatation of peritubular capillaries; mild inflammatory infiltrates were present in only 3 cases; mild glomerular lesions were not always found (glomerular ischemia, mesangial hypertrophy). There was no vascular lesions IFN alpha was withdrawn in these 6 patients, associated with methylprednisolone pulses in 5 cases. Renal function improved in two cases, stabilized in one and progressed to end stage renal failure in 3 within 4 to 12 months. Four patients had iterative renal biopsies showing in all cases diffuse interstitial fibrosis. This subgroup of patients did not statistically differ at the start of the study from those who did not develop renal failure according to baseline immunosuppression, HLA matching, total peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) count. PBL subtypes. INF alpha therapy was associated with acute or subacute renal failure in 37% of patients. The most prominent histological finding was a diffuse interstitial edema of rapid onset, without signs of cellular or vascular rejection. Thus we do not recommend to use IFN alpha therapy in RT patients with chronic hepatitis C, until the mechanisms of the subsequent renal failure be more understood.
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PMID:[Acute renal insufficiency in renal transplants treated with interferon-alpha for chronic hepatitis C]. 876 57

Sixteen kidney transplant (KT) patients (10 men, 6 women, aged 49 +/- 10 years) with chronic hepatitis C alpha-interferon (IFN-alpha) therapy (Intron A, Schering Plough) at a dose of 3 x 10(6) units subcutaneously 3 times a week. The treatment was scheduled for 24 consecutive weeks. Each patient had had stable renal function for at least 12 months prior to IFN-alpha therapy (mean serum creatinine, SCr, 121 +/- 38 mmol/l). Fourteen patients were receiving cyclosporin-A (CsA)-based immunosuppression and 2 patients were on conventional therapy. The patients' SCr was checked every 2 weeks while on IFN-alpha, or weekly if it increased more than 15% from baseline. IFN-alpha was withdrawn if SCr increased more than 25% from baseline, in which case a kidney biopsy was performed. Six patients experienced either acute (n = 5) or subacute (n = 1) renal failure within 7-24 weeks after the onset of IFN-alpha therapy. Their mean SCr increased from 105 +/- 31 to 207 +/- 63 mmol/l (p = 0.02) with de novo proteinuria in 1 case (1 g/day) and an increase in preexisting proteinuria in 2. The other 3 patients did not develop proteinuria. In each case, histological study showed diffuse interstitial edema associated with dilation of the peritubular capillaries, whereas mild inflammatory infiltrates were present in only 3 cases and mild glomerular lesions were not always found (glomerular ischemia, mesangial hypertrophy). There were no vascular lesions. IFN-alpha was withdrawn in these 6 patients, in association with methylprednisolone pulses in 5 cases. Renal function improved in 2 cases, stabilized in 1 and progressed to end-stage renal failure in 3 within 4-12 months. Four of these patients had iterative renal biopsies which showed diffuse interstitial fibrosis in each case. The patients who developed renal failure did not statistically differ at the start of the study from those who did not, with respect to the following: baseline immunosuppression, HLA matching, total peripheral blood lymphocyte count or peripheral blood lymphocyte subtypes. IFN-alpha therapy was associated with acute or subacute renal failure in 37% of the patients. The most prominent histological finding was diffuse interstitial edema of rapid onset, without signs of cellular or vascular rejection. In conclusion, we do not recommend IFN-alpha therapy for KT patients with chronic hepatitis C, until the mechanisms of the subsequent renal failure are better understood.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in kidney transplant patients treated with interferon alpha 2b for chronic hepatitis C. 893 73