Background Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) is a life-threatening complication during the treatment of malignant neoplasia. We sought to describe characteristics and predictors of acute kidney injury (AKI), remission and mortality in high-risk TLS patients. In this retrospective monocentric study, we included all patients with the diagnosis of biological and/or clinical TLS from 2012 to 2018. The primary outcome was the prevalence of AKI during the acute phase of TLS. Secondary outcomes were overall mortality and remission of the underlying malignancy at 1 year. Results Among 153 patients with TLS, 123 (80.4%) patients experienced AKI and 83 (54.2%) required renal replacement therapy. mSOFA score (OR = 1.15, IC 95% [1.02–1.34]), age (OR = 1.05, IC 95% [1.02–1.08]) and male gender (OR = 6.79, IC 95% [2.59–19.44]) were associated with AKI. Rasburicase use (HR = 2.45, IC 95% [1.17–5.15]) was associated with remission of the underlying malignancy at 1 year. Parameters associated with mortality at 1 year were mechanical ventilation (HR = 1.96, IC 95% [1.02–3.78]), vasopressors (HR = 3.13, IC 95% [1.59–6.15]), age (HR = 1.02, IC 95% [1–1.03]), spontaneous TLS (HR = 1.65, IC 95% [1.01–2.69]) and delay of chemotherapy administration (HR = 1.01, IC 95% [1–1.03]). Conclusions AKI is highly prevalent in TLS patients. Rasburicase is associated with better outcomes regarding remission of the underlying malignancy. As rasburicase may be an indirect marker of a high degree of tumor lysis and chemosensitivity, more studies are warranted to confirm the protective role of urate oxidase. Delaying chemotherapy may be deleterious in terms of long-term outcomes.
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Kidney transplantation has become the preferred treatment option in end-stage chronic renal failure as it provides significant improvements over dialysis in terms of both quality and duration of life. Even after several randomized studies conducted in the last 20 years, the combination of CNI, MMF, and steroids continues to be considered the gold standard for kidney transplantation. However, novel molecules aimed at minimizing renal and cardiovascular toxicity, particularly with CNI sparing, are being identified. The present review assesses various such molecules available currently and briefly discusses the existing combination strategies and novel perspectives for the redesigning of protocols based on our novel therapeutic arsenal.
Background and Aims IgG4 disease is a systemic fibroinflammatory disorder that may affect virtually any organ. IgG4-related kidney disease (IgG4-RKD) is a major manifestation, occurring in almost one third of patient. The present study addresses the diagnosis, management and outcome of French patients with IgG4-RKD. Method We conducted a retrospective observational study including patients with renal impairment due to IgG4-RKD from 32 centers. Clinical, biological, and imaging data, as well as management modalities and outcome, were retrieved from medical records. Results 74 patients, 64 males and 10 females, were diagnosed with IgG4-RKD between 1997 and 2019 and were included in the present study. The mean age at diagnosis was 65.2 ± 15-year-old. Renal involvement was present at diagnosis in 63% of cases. Nine (12%) patients had isolated renal involvement, whereas extra-renal involvement included retroperitoneal fibrosis (20%), auto-immune pancreatitis (49%), cholangitis (27%), and lung disease (22%). Renal imaging lesions were observed in 48 (64%) patients, and included renal hypertrophy, patchy lesions and pseudo-tumor solitary renal lesion. PET-CT scan was performed in 47 (65%) patients and showed hypermetabolic renal lesion(s) in 36% of cases. The presence of extra-renal hypermetabolic lesions was observed in 35 cases (74%). 43 %, 25% and 14% of patients presented with AKI, AKI-on-CKD, and isolated CKD, respectively. The mean serum creatinine level at diagnosis was 244 ± 140 µmol/L, corresponding to an eGFR of 69 ± 22ml/min/1.73m. Urinary sediment was most often bland. Mean urine protein-to-creatinine ratio was 1.27 g/g. of note, 26% of patients had more than 1 g/g. 82% of patients underwent a kidney biopsy showing tubulointerstitial involvement in all cases, 12 (16%) had additional glomerular involvement, mainly membranous nephropathy. The major additional laboratory abnormalities included polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, and increased serum IgG4 increase in 83% and 86%, respectively. Complement levels were decreased in 27 (37%) patients. Two patients were lost for follow-up and 69 patients were treated with corticosteroid therapy in 66 (89%) patients and 10 received Rituximab as first line therapy. The mean duration of follow-up was 28.8 ± 30 months. During follow-up, 22 (30%) patients relapsed, while 45 (62%) patients had persistent CKD at last follow-up, with a mean eGFR of 47±27 ml/min/1.73m. Seven (9%) patients progressed to ESRD and 7 died. A significant response was achieved in 46 (62%) patients. Patients who received steroids higher than 0.5mg/kg/day had lower serum IgG4 levels (1.8 g/l versus 5.7 g/l, p=0.007) at last follow up but there was no significant difference observed in terms of renal function between the two groups (45.5 vs 48.8 ml/min/1.73m, p= 0.72). By univariate analysis, predictors of relapse were low C3 or C4 serum level (p=0.01), ANCA positivity (p= 0.02), renal radiological lesions (p=0.05). At last follow-up the eGFR was worse in patients with a serum creatinine diagnosis greater than 300 µmol/L (30.25 vs 57 ml/min/1.73m p=0.0001) and more progressed to ESRD (p=0.03). Conclusion IgG4-RKD has been recently described and may affect middle-aged males. The disease presents as tubulointerstitial nephritis with glomerular involvement in 16% of cases. Disease response to corticosteroid therapy is favorable but is characterized by a high rate of relapses and a significant risk of persistent CKD in the majority of patient. Risk of ESRD and death in almost 20% of patients.
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