Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Pathology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport (Drs Herrera and Gu); and the Department of Pathology, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock (Drs Joseph, Hough, and Barlogie)
Abstract
Abstract
Context.—Renal dysfunction in plasma cell dyscrasias is common. It is the second most common cause of death in patients with myeloma.
Objective.—We evaluated 77 sequential autopsies performed on patients dying from complications of plasma cell dyscrasias during an 11-year period at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. These consisted of 15% of all the autopsies performed during this time.
Design.—The kidneys were evaluated by light microscopy using hematoxylin-eosin–stained sections as well as Congo red and thioflavin T stains when amyloidosis was in the differential diagnosis. Immunofluorescence was performed on selected cases.
Results.—The most common lesion identified was cast nephropathy (30%). Other findings included acute tubulopathy, AL-amyloidosis, light chain deposition disease, tubulointerstitial nephritis associated with monotypic light chain deposits, thrombotic microangiopathy, renal infarction, fungal infection, and plasma cell tumor nodules. Autolysis, an expected finding in autopsy evaluations, was significant in 25 cases.
Conclusions.—Renal lesions are heterogeneous in these patients. In some cases, combined pathologic lesions were noted. Myeloma cast nephropathy predominated among all the renal lesions noted.
Publisher
Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Subject
Medical Laboratory Technology,General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Cited by
75 articles.
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