Quantifying the benefits of remission duration in focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis
Author:
Jauhal Arenn1, Reich Heather N1, Hladunewich Michelle2, Barua Moumita1, Hansen Bettina E3, Naimark David2, Troyanov Stéphan4, Cattran Daniel C1, Ryan N, Ling P, Lam P, Romano M, Albert S, Aslahi R, Aujla P, Barrese N, Barua M, Berall M, Berbece A, Bhandhal S, Birbrager D R, Boll P, Buldo G, Cardella C, Chan C, Chan P, Charest A, Cherney D, Chidambaram M, Chow S, Cole E, Cummings M, Donnelly S, Dunn A, Elfirjani A, Fong S Fenton E, Fung J, Goldstein J, Harel Z, Hercz G, Jassal S V, Kajbaf S, Kamel K, Kang A, Karanicolas S, Ki V, Kim S J, Kim D H, Konvalinka A, Kundhal K, Langlois V, Lekas P, Lenga I, Licht C, Lipscombe J, Lok C, Ly J, Manogaran M, McQuillan R, McFarlane P, Mehta H, Mendelssohn D, Miller J A, Nagai G, Nathoo B, Nesrallah G, Pandes M, Pandeya S, Parekh R, Pearl R, Pei Y, Perkins D, Perl J, Pierratos A, Prasad R, Radhakrishnan S, Rao M, Richardson R, Roscoe J, Roushdi A, Sachdeva J, Sapir D, Sasal J, Schiff J, Scholey J, Schreiber M, Shan X, Siddiqui N, Sikaneta T, Silva Gomez C V, Singh S, Singhal R, Sohal A, Steele A, Suneja S, Szaky E, Tam D, Tam P, Teskey L, Tinckam K, Ting R, Tsui S, Turner P A, Wadehra D, Wadgymar J A, Wald R, Walele A, Warner L, Wei C, Weinstein J, Whiteside C, Wijeyasekaran S, Wong G, Wu G, Yassa T, Yuen D, Zaltzman J,
Affiliation:
1. Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University Health Network, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario , Canada 2. Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Science Center, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario , Canada 3. Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto , Toronto , Canada 4. Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, University of Montreal , Montreal, Quebec , Canada
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Although the clinical benefit of obtaining a remission in proteinuria in nephrotic patients with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is recognized, the long-term value of maintaining it and the impact of relapses on outcome are not well described.
Methods
We examined the impact of remissions and relapses on either a 50% decline in kidney function or end-stage kidney disease (combined event) using time-dependent and landmark analyses in a retrospective study of all patients from the Toronto Glomerulonephritis Registry with biopsy-proven FSGS, established nephrotic-range proteinuria and at least one remission.
Results
In the 203 FSGS individuals with a remission, 89 never relapsed and 114 experienced at least one relapse. The first recurrence was often followed by a repeating pattern of remission and relapse. The 10-year survival from a combined event was 15% higher in those with no relapse versus those with any relapse. This smaller than anticipated difference was related to the favourable outcome in individuals whose relapses quickly remitted. Relapsers who ultimately ended in remission (n = 46) versus in relapse (n = 68) experienced a 91% and 32% 7-year event survival (P < .001), respectively. Using time-varying survival analyses that considered all periods of remission and relapse in every patient and adjusting for each period's initial estimated glomerular filtration rate, the state of relapse was associated with a 2.17 (95% confidence interval 1.32–3.58; P = .002) greater risk of experiencing a combined event even in this FSGS remission cohort.
Conclusion
In FSGS, unless remissions are maintained and relapses avoided, long-term renal survival remains poor. Treatment strategies addressing remission duration remain poorly defined and should be an essential question in future trials.
Funder
Toronto East General Hospital Foundation
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Transplantation,Nephrology
Reference38 articles.
1. Distribution of biopsy-proven presumed primary glomerulonephropathies in 2000–2011 among a racially and ethnically diverse US population;Sim;Am J Kidney Dis,2016 2. Twenty-one-year trend in ESRD due to focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in the United States;Kitiyakara;Am J Kidney Dis,2004 3. The impact of sex in primary glomerulonephritis;Cattran;Nephrol Dial Transplant,2008 4. Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis;D'Agati;N Engl J Med,2011 5. Integration of genetic testing and pathology for the diagnosis of adults with FSGS;Yao;Clin J Am Soc Nephrol,2019
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|