Affiliation:
1. Department of Nephrology Christian Medical College Vellore India
2. Department of Pathology Christian Medical College Vellore India
3. Department of Biostatistics Christian Medical College Vellore India
Abstract
AbstractAimDiabetic patients are prone to infections, thus making them a unique cohort at risk of developing bacterial infection‐related glomerulonephritis (IRGN).MethodsIn total, 1693 adult diabetic patients underwent kidney biopsy between 2005 and 2021 at our tertiary care hospital in South India. Of these, 121 consecutive cases which met criteria of bacterial IRGN were included in this study.ResultsThe mean age of the cohort was 53.1 ± 10.1 years and 83/121 (68.5%) were males. Majority (98.3%) had type 2 diabetes for a median duration of 6 (IQR, 2–12) years. The most common sites of infection were skin (47/121, 38.8%) and urinary tract (15/121, 12.4%). Fifty percent (58/121) of patients had underlying advanced diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Isolated C3 deposits (without immunoglobulin) occurred in 66/121 (54.5%) patients predominantly in advanced DKD patients. IgA‐dominant glomerulonephritis occurred in only 9/121 (7.4%) patients. Short‐course oral steroid was given to 86/121 (71.1%) patients. Steroid related dysglycemia and immunosuppression related infections occurred in 9/61 (14.8%) and 16/61 (26.2%) patients respectively. Of the 90 patients with follow up details >3 months, 46 (51.1%) progressed to kidney failure over a median period of 0.5 (IQR, 0–7.2) months. Patients diagnosed in the latter half of our study period (2013–2021) were older, less commonly presented with fever, had more pronounced hypocomplementemia and severe renal histology predominantly with a ‘starry sky’ immunofluorescence pattern.ConclusionSuperimposed bacterial IRGN on underlying DKD is associated with poor renal outcomes. Use of short course steroid was associated with significant toxicity.
Subject
Nephrology,General Medicine
Cited by
1 articles.
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