Title: Minimal change disease
1Minimal change disease
2Introduction
- Nephrotic syndrome is kidney disease with
proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, and edema.
Nephrotic range proteinuria is 3 grams per day or
more -
- Nephrotic syndrome may affect adults and
children, of both sexes and of any race
3Nephrotic syndrome (NS)
- Classification
- Nephrotic syndrome can be primary, being a
disease specific to the kidneys, or it can be
secondary, being a renal manifestation of a
systemic general illness - In all cases, injury to glomeruli is an essential
feature
4Primary causes of nephrotic syndrome (NS)
- Include, in approximate order of frequency
- Minimal-change nephropathy
- Focal glomerulosclerosis
- Membranous nephropathy
- Hereditary nephropathies
5Secondary causes of NS
- Include, again in order of approximate
frequency - Diabetes mellitus
- Lupus erythematosus
- Amyloidosis and paraproteinemias
- Viral infections (eg, hepatitis B, hepatitis C,
human immunodeficiency virus HIV ) - Preeclampsia
6Minimal change disease
- Most common cause of the nephrotic syndrome (NS)
in children - 10-15 of NS in adults, third most common after
MN and FSGS - More common in Hispanics, Asians, Arabs and
Caucasians - Clinical and pathological entity defined by
selective proteinuria and hypoalbuminemia that
occurs in the absence of - cellular glomerular infiltrates or
- immunoglobulin deposits
7NS in infancy and childhood is an important
entity
- A study from New Zealand found the incidence of
nephrotic syndrome to be almost 20 cases per
million children under age 15 years 1 - In specific populations, such as those of Finnish
or Mennonite origin, congenital nephrotic
syndrome may occur in 1 in 10,000 or 1 in 500
births, respectively 2 - 1. J Paediatr Child Health. May 200743(5)337-41
- 2. Pediatr Nephrol. Dec 200419(12)1313-8
8According to the International Study of Kidney
Diseases in Childhood (ISKDC)
- 84.5 of all children with primary nephrotic
syndrome have minimal-change nephrotic syndrome
(MCNS) - 9.5 have focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
(FSGS) - 2.5 have mesangial proliferation, and
- 3.5 have membranous nephropathy or another cause
of the disease 1,2 - MCNS remains the most important cause of chronic
renal disease in children -
- 1. Kidney Int. Dec 198120(6)765-71
- 2. J Pediatr. Apr 198198(4)561-4
9Pathophysiology
- Primary urine is formed through the filtration of
plasma fluid across the glomerular barrier the
glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is 125 mL/min - The plasma flow rate (Qp) is close to 700
mL/min, with the filtration fraction being 20 - The concentration of albumin in serum is 40 g/L,
while the estimated concentration of albumin in
primary urine is 4 mg/L, or 0.1 of its
concentration in plasma
GBM glomerular basement membrane Endo
fenestrated endothelial cells ESL endothelial
cell surface layer (often referred to as the
glycocalyx).
10The barriers that keep protein and blood cells
out of the urine. These are the endothelial cell,
basement membrane and epithelial cell (podocyte).
The epithelial cell (podocyte) seems to be most
important. Injury to these barriers causes
proteinuria and hematuria
11Pathophysiology (contd.)
- The glomerular structural changes that may cause
proteinuria are - - (1) damage to the endothelial surface,
- - (2) damage to the glomerular basement
membrane, - - and/or (3) damage of the podocytes
- In congenital nephrotic syndrome, the gene for
nephrin, a protein of the filtration slit, is
mutated, leading to nephrotic syndrome in infancy
12Pathophysiology (contd.)
- Albuminuria alone may occur, or, with greater
injury, leakage of all plasma proteins, (ie,
proteinuria) may take place - Proteinuria that is more than 85 albumin is
selective proteinuria - In minimal-change nephropathy, proteinuria is
selective
13Minimal Change Disease Pathology
14Pathogenesis of edema
- An increase in glomerular permeability leads to
albuminuria and eventually to hypoalbuminemia - In turn, hypoalbuminemia lowers the plasma
colloid osmotic pressure, causing greater
transcapillary filtration of water throughout the
body and thus the development of edema - A reduction in plasma volume, with a secondary
increase of sodium and water retention by the
kidneys
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16Metabolic consequences of proteinuria
- levels of serum lipids are usually elevated
- The loss of antithrombin III and plasminogen and
increase in clotting factors, especially factors
I, VII, VIII, and X, increases the risk for
venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism - Hypovitaminosis D - malabsorption of Ca
- Lower the patient's resistance to infections and
increase the risk of sepsis and peritonitis
17Light microscopy of glomerulus in MCD
18Immunofluorescence Microscopy
www.gamewood.net/rnet/renalpath/noimcx.jpg
19Electron Microscopy
20The glomerular capillary wall
Normal
MCD
Van den Berg, Weening, Clinical Science (2004)
107, 125136
21Pathogenesis - Intrinsic factor
- Genetic basis for hereditary NS
- NS of the Finnish type
- Autosomal-recessive steroid-resistant NS
- Familial forms of FSGS
- Diffuse mesangila sclerosis associated with
Denys-Drash syndrome and with Frasier syndrome - NS associated with nail-patella syndrome
- Help elucidate molecular aspect of FSGS
- Not clear for MCD
22Molecular anatomy of the podocyte foot process
cytoskeleton
Nature Genetics 24, 333 - 335 (2000)
23Pathogenesis extrinsic factor, better
explanation for MCD
- Clinical Observations - Shalhoubs hypothesis
- MCD frequently remits with measles infection
- Corticosteroids and alkylating drugs cause a
remission - Association of MCD with Hodgkin disease
- Experimental Observations
- T cell hybridoma (Koyama KI 1991 (40) 453-460)
- Removal of glomerular permeability factor leads
to normal kidney (Ali Transplantation 1994 Oct
1558(7)849-52) - circulating factor
- possible link between T-cell response and
glomerular disease
24MCD is a disorder of T cells
- T-cells release a cytokine that injures the
glomerular epithelial foot processes - This leads to a decreased synthesis of polyanions
- The polyanions constitute the normal charge
barrier to the filtration of macromolecules, such
as albumin - When the polyanions are damaged, leakage of
albumin follows - The identity of this circulating permeability
factor is uncertain, although it is postulated
that it may be hemopexin
25- Some of the cytokines that have been studied in
MCD are interleukin-12 (IL-12) and interleukin-4
(IL-4) - IL-12 levels have been found to be elevated in
peripheral blood monocytes during the active
phase and normalized during remission - Interleukin-18 (IL-18) can synergize with IL-12
to selectively increase the production of
vascular permeability factor from T cells - In addition, levels of IL-4 and CD23 (a receptor
for immunoglobulin E IgE 1 have been found to
be elevated in peripheral blood lymphocytes -
- 1. Am J Med Sci. Oct 2009338(4)264-7
26- Synaptopodin is a proline-rich protein intimately
associated with actin microfilaments present in
the foot processes of podocytes - Greater synaptopodin expression in podocytes is
associated with a significantly better response
to steroid therapy - Interleukin-13 (IL-13) has been implicated in the
pathogenesis of MCD. - IL-13 genetic polymorphisms correlate with the
long-term outcome of MCD. - IL-13 overexpression can cause podocyte foot
process fusion and proteinuria 1 - 1. May 200718(5)1476-85
27Overexpression of Interleukin-13 Induces
Minimal-ChangeLike Nephropathy in Rats
- Background
- MCD may be a T cell dependent disorder that
results in glomerular podocyte dysfunction - Th2 cytokine bias in patients with MCD
- MCD associated with atopy and allergy
- Relapse MCD with elevated IL-4 and IL-13
- Association between MCD and Hodgkinss disease
- IL-13 known to be an autocrine growth factor for
the Reed-Sternberg
28Hypothesis
- IL-13 may play an important role in the
development of proteinuria in MCNS by exerting a
direct effect on podocytes, acting through the
IL-13 receptors on the podocyte cell surface,
initiating certain signaling pathways that
eventually lead to changes in the expression of
podocyte-related proteins (nephrin, podocin, and
dystroglycan) - IL-13 transfected mouse was used as a model
29Mean 24-h urine albumin excretion (mg/24 h)
30Comparison of control, IL-13-transfected mouse at
experiment end (day 70)
Parameter Control Rats (n17) Group 1 (proteinuric rats), n34 Grp 2 neprhrotic rats n7
Serum albumin 42.7 /- 1.8 40.7 /- 1.3 25.5 /- 2.2
Urine albumin 0.36 /- 0.04 3.19 /- 0.98 9.69 /- 4.07
Serum cholesterol 1.72 /- 0.05 2.68 /- 0.18 6.88 /- 1.09
Serum IL-13 7.1 /- 1.8 241.4 /- 69.5 708.6 /- 257.7
Nephrin 0.16 /- 0.03 0.11 /- 0.01 0.01 /- 0.005
Podocin 0.25/- 0.05 0.17 /- 0.02 0.01 /- 0.005
Yellow p lt0.001 vs control
Red plt0.001 vs control and Grp 1
31Histopathologic features on day 70 at
killing(A) Glomerulus of IL-13transfected rat
showing no significant histologic changes
(periodic acid-Schiff stain). (B) Glomerulus of
IL-13transfected rat showing fusion of podocyte
foot processes (arrows). (C) Glomerulus of
control rat showing normal individual podocyte
foot processes along the glomerular basement
membrane (GBM arrows).
32Immunofluorescence staining of glomeruli for
protein expression of nephrin, podocin,
dystroglycan, and synaptopodin
Control
IL-13 infected
nephrin
podocin
dystroglycan
synaptopodin
33Summary
- IL-13-transfected rats
- Developed minimal change like GN, as evidence by
LM and EM changes - decrease in the expression of nephrin, podocin,
and dystroglycan associated with increased
urinary albumin excretion and podocyte foot
process effacement - suggesting that these proteins are essential in
maintaining the filtration barrier, thus
controlling glomerular permeability - decrease was not due to loss of podocytes -
34- In patients who develop acute renal failure,
endothelin 1 expression is greater in the
glomeruli, vessels, and tubules than in the
nonacute renal failure group - The glomerular epithelial cells (podocytes) and
the slit diaphragm connecting the podocyte foot
processes play a primary role in the development
of proteinuria - Nephrin is a major component of the slit
diaphragm. The slit diaphragm is often missing in
MC nephrotic syndrome (MCD) kidneys - The role of nephrin and the slit diaphragm in MCD
is not known. However, genetic variants of a
glomerular filter protein may play a role in some
patients with MCD
35- Izzedine et al found a lack of glomerular
dysferlin expression associated with
minimal-change nephropathy in a patient with
limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B. 1 - In the same study, 2 of 3 other patients with
dysferlinopathy had microalbuminuria - Although a multitude of studies have been
published, the mechanism by which T cells
increase glomerular permeability has remained
unproven - 1. Am J Kidney Dis. Jul 200648(1)143-50
36Frequency
- United States - In preadolescents, minimal-change
nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) makes up 85-95 of all
cases of nephrotic syndrome - In adolescents and young adults, the prevalence
is 50, while in adults, MCNS accounts for 10-15
of primary nephrotic syndrome cases. - The incidence of nephrotic syndrome is 2-7 new
cases annually per 100,000 children, and the
prevalence is 15 cases per 100,000 children - Asians may be at increased risk.
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38Incidence of important causes of nephrotic
syndrome, in number per million population
- The left panel shows systemic causes, and the
right panel lists primary renal diseases that can
cause nephrotic syndrome. - fgs focal glomerulosclerosis,
- MN membranous nephropathy,
- min change minimal-change nephropathy
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. May 20061(3)483-7
Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2007221608-1618
39Sex / Age
- It is found twice as frequently in boys than in
girls - The frequency is the same between the sexes in
adults - The incidence peaks in children aged 2 years,
with approximately 80 being younger than 6 years
at the time of diagnosis - In adults, the mean age of onset is 40 years.
40A schema of the average patient ages associated
with various common forms of nephrotic syndrome
41History
- Edema may be preceded by an upper respiratory
tract infection, an allergic reaction to a bee
sting, or the use of certain drugs or
malignancies. - Facial edema is noted first.
- Malaise and easy fatigability can occur.
- Weight gain often is an additional feature.
- The patient also may present with the following
- Hypovolemia
- Hypertension
- Thromboembolism
- Infection
42Physical
- BP - usually is normal in childrenbut may be
elevated in adults - Dependent edema is the most prominent sign. The
retina has a wet appearance. Subungual edema with
horizontal lines (called Muehrcke lines) also may
occur. - Hernias may be found, and the elasticity of the
ears may be decreased. - Heavy proteinuria - leads to a state of protein
depletion with muscle wasting, thinning of the
skin, and growth failure - Pleural and ascitic fluid can accumulate. Rarely,
cellulitis, peritonitis, or pneumonia - Children may have growth failure.
43Causes
- Almost all cases are idiopathic, but a small
percentage of cases (approximately 10-20) may
have an identifiable cause - Causes may include the following Secondary
- Drugs - Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs), rifampin, interferon,
ampicillin/penicillin, trimethadione,
mercury-containing cosmetic skin cream - Toxins - Mercury, lithium, bee stings, fire coral
exposure - Infection - Infectious mononucleosis, HIV,
immunization - Tumor - Hodgkin lymphoma (most commonly),
carcinoma, other lymphoproliferative diseases - Posthematopoietic stem cell transplant
44Laboratory Studies
- Urine analysis - profound proteinuria and oval
fat bodies observed. - In children, the critical level for diagnosis is
more than 40 mg/h/m2. - In adults, the threshold is more than 3.5
g/d/1.73 m2. - Albumin-to-creatinine concentration ratio is in
excess of 5. - Urine specific gravity is high because of
proteinuria. - A 24-hour urine is obtained for protein and
creatinine clearance. - Hypoalbuminemia - Nephrotic syndrome in children
is defined by a serum albumin of less than 2.5
g/dL. - Hyperlipidemia also is a feature of a nephrotic
state. - Renal function usually is normal except in cases
of ARF - Hyponatremia often is observed,
- Elevated hemoglobin and hematocrit
45Imaging Studies - Renal sonogram is normal.
- Procedures
- Because of the high prevalence of MCD in children
with nephrotic syndrome, an empiric trial of
corticosteroids commonly is the first step in
therapy - Renal biopsy typically is performed only in
resistant cases - Generally, if proteinuria remains after 2
relapses or courses of steroids, a tissue
diagnosis should be made before starting
cytotoxic or immunosuppressive therapy
46Medical Care
- Corticosteroids are the treatment of choice,
leading to complete remission of proteinuria in
most cases - Approximately 90 of children respond within 2
weeks to prednisone at a dose of 60 mg/msq/d. - The treatment is continued for another 6 weeks,
at lower doses of prednisone, after the remission
of proteinuria. - In some children, proteinuria fails to clear by
6-8 weeks, and performing a renal biopsy may be
useful to determine if another process may be
present
47Adults respond more slowly than children
- A response in up to 80-90 in adolescents and
adults - The time to remission is up to 16 weeks. If
patients are steroid-resistant or they relapse
frequently, a trial of immunosuppressants is
given - Immunosuppressants - cyclophosphamide and
chlorambucil - Cyclosporine is considered to be an acceptable
drug for maintenance therapy in patients with
frequent relapses and steroid dependency.
However, it is less efficacious than
cyclophosphamide at maintaining sustained
remission
48Leg edema in MCDbefore treatment after
treatment
49Response of patients to steroids is used to
divide patients into various groups.
- Complete remission This is defined as complete
resolution of proteinuria for at least 3-5
consecutive days. - Partial remission This is defined as a reduction
in the degree of proteinuria without complete
clearing. - Relapse This is defined as a reoccurrence of
proteinuria for at least 3-5 consecutive days.
50- Because MCNS accounts for 90 of all cases of
idiopathic nephrotic syndrome in children,
steroids are started empirically. A biopsy is
performed only in those cases where no remission
occurs - In comparison, a biopsy is performed in all
adults before the initiation of treatment. Adults
tend to respond more slowly, with more than 25
taking as long as 12-16 weeks to undergo complete
remission - Initial regimen in adults consists of oral
prednisone in a daily dosage of 1 mg/kg of body
weight for 8-16 weeks (or for 1 wk after
remission has been induced). The patient is then
placed on an alternate-day single-dose (1 mg/kg)
regimen to minimize the incidence of adverse
effects. - If proteinuria disappears or is reduced to a very
low level, high-dose alternate-day therapy is
continued for several weeks to 1 month and then
slowly tapered over several months in an attempt
to reduce the likelihood of relapse
51To prevent relapse, steroids are continued for
several weeks after remission.
- Steroid-sensitive patients These patients have
complete remission within 8-12 weeks with
infrequent relapses. Children usually respond
within 4-6 weeks, whereas adults respond in up to
15 weeks. Treatment usually is continued for
another 6 weeks after complete remission of
proteinuria occurs. - Steroid-dependent patients or frequent relapsers
If remission is followed by recurrence, a second
course of steroids is given. Those patients who
need steroids repeatedly are categorized as
frequent relapsers or steroid-dependent patients.
Relapse in these patients can occur either during
tapering of steroids or after cessation of
therapy.
52How does steroid work in MCD?
- Widely used in treatment but their mode of action
is poorly understood - What is its effectiveness in MCD where there is
no evident inflammation
53Steroid quick overview
- Inhibitory effects on both innate and acquired
immunologic function - Innate Immune function
- Reduced Inflammatory response
- inhibit transmigration of leukocytes
- attenuate the generation of inflammatory exudates
- Phospholipase A2 suppresion
- COX-2 suppression
- Acquired Immune function
- Antigen presenting cells, B cell and T cells
54Overview of Intracellular Effects
55Could steroid have more direct effect in kidney?
56Direct effects of dexamethasone on human podocyte
Xing, Saleem, et al
- Hypothesis
- Glucocorticoid exert direct protection of
podocytes from injury and/or promotion of repair - Nephrin podocyte specific protein
- mutation of NPHS2 gene - cause congenital
nephrotic syndrome of Finnish type - Studies show possible downregulation of nephrin
in MCD
57Result effects of dexamethasone on podocyte
maturation at 37 C and expression of nephrin
Immunofluorescent staining
Quantificaton of nephrin
58Summary
- Dexamethasone enhanced and accelerated podocyte
maturation, with a particulary striking effect on
expression of nephrin
59Other steroid response
In disease state With dexamethasone
p21 Upregulated downregulation allow podocyte to enter the cell cycle enhance ability to repair
VEGF a mitogen for vascular endotheila cells Downregulated
p52 Induces apoptosis downregulated
60Cytotoxic drugs
- Can be considered to either induce a remission or
decrease the adverse effects of continuous
steroid use. - Cyclophosphamide 2 mg/kg/d for 8-12 weeks, can be
used in such patients - Cyclosporine (4-6 mg/kg/d) also can be used in
patients who continue to relapse or who are
steroid-dependent.
61- Because cyclophosphamide is cheaper and has a
better response rate, it is preferable over
cyclosporine in most patients with
steroid-dependent or frequently relapsing MCD - Studies in adults and children have shown that
both cyclophosphamide and cyclosporine added to
steroid treatment may induce remission - If these patients relapse at a later time, they
tend to become steroid-sensitive. - Ref Pediatr Nephrol. Nov 200924(11)2177-85
62Pediatr Nephrol. Jun 200924(6)1187-92
- A study by Swartz et al of 55 children with
steroid-resistant or steroid-dependent MCD
determined that 23 of these patients also had
mesangial IgM that was visible through
immunofluorescence (one of the characteristics of
IgM nephropathy) - The investigators also found that the children
with MCD and immunofluorescently-visible IgM
responded better to treatment with cyclosporine
than to therapy with cyclophosphamide
63Kidney Int. Dec 200772(12)1429-47
- Adults are particularly prone to the adverse
effects of corticosteroids, but they do well on
cyclophosphamide.Cyclosporine may be used as an
alternative to cyclophosphamide in order to avoid
toxicities associated with the latter - Keeping the dosage of cyclosporine at a minimum
and carefully monitoring the drugs levels have
been shown to be helpful in avoiding
cyclosporine-associated nephrotoxicity.
64The treatment of MCD with tacrolimus has produced
varying results
- Nephrol Dial Transplant. Jun 200823(6)1919-25
- Nephrol Dial Transplant. Jul 200621(7)1848-54
- Clin Nephrol. Jun 200665(6)393-400
65Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF)
- MMF may also be beneficial to patients with
frequent relapses. This was suggested by a small
study where 7 patients with MCD and FSGS with
multiple relapses were treated with MMF (1 g
bid). After 1 year, 5 of the 7 patients were
still in remission, and the steroid dose was
significantly decreased - In addition, the immunomodulator levamisole also
has been used in children
66Rituximab
- One case report describes long-term remission
with rituximab (an anti-CD20 antibody) 1 - Rituximab has been shown to be effective against
minimal-change disease. - Relapse has been linked to the reappearance of
B19 cells, which rituximab depletes - Rituximab may therefore have a role in the
treatment of steroid-dependent and multirelapsing
patients - 1. Am J Kidney Dis. Jan 200749(1)158-61
67Hypovolemia
- Immediate volume expansion with purified plasma
protein fraction and isotonic sodium chloride
solution - Parenteral albumin infusion is not appropriate
long-term management for patients with
hypoalbuminemia because it has only a transient
effect. Such crises should be avoided with
recognition of the earlier signs of hypovolemia,
including abdominal pain, increase in hematocrit,
and response to contributing factors (eg,
diarrhea, septicemia, diuretic therapy).
68Edema
- This condition should be controlled by dietary
sodium restriction. - Small amounts of edema are not of much clinical
significance. - The use of diuretics should be reserved for
patients with severe cases of edema, particularly
in the presence of respiratory or
gastrointestinal symptoms, and when the condition
restricts activity
69Thrombotic episodes/ Infections
- Thrombotic episodes should be prevented by
mobilization and meticulous attention to
venipuncture and intravenous infusion sites.
Established episodes should be managed with
heparinization. - Infections
- These must be treated aggressively.
- Cellulitis, peritonitis, otitis, and pneumonia
are common infections. - Susceptibility to pneumococcal infections
warrants the administration of penicillin
prophylaxis to patients in relapse
corticosteroids increase the problem of infection
70Diet
- An adequate dietary protein intake, in accordance
with the recommended daily allowance (RDA) is
necessary. No evidence suggests that hepatic
albumin synthesis is elevated with protein intake
that is higher than the RDA. - Dietary sodium restriction helps forestall the
progression of edema and also is prudent in the
management of hypertension
71Activity
- Mobilization, rather than bed rest, is indicated
to avoid thromboembolic complications
Aidan has Minimal Change Disease
72Thank You !