The M-type phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R) is a target autoantigen in adult idiopathic membranous nephropathy (MN), but the prevalence of autoantibodies against PLA2R is unknown among Chinese patients with MN. Here, we measured anti-PLA2R antibody in the serum of 60 patients with idiopathic MN, 20 with lupus-associated MN, 16 with hepatitis B (HBV)-associated MN, and 10 with tumorassociated MN. Among patients with idiopathic MN, 49 (82%) had detectable anti-PLA2R autoantibodies using a Western blot assay; an assay with greater sensitivity detected very low titers of anti-PLA2R in 10 of the remaining 11 patients. Using the standard assay, we detected anti-PLA2R antibody in only 1 patient with lupus, 1 with HBV, and 3 with cancer, producing an overall specificity of 89% in this cohort limited to patients with secondary MN. The enhanced assay detected low titers of anti-PLA2R in only 2 additional samples of HBV-associated MN. In summary, these results suggest that PLA2R is a major target antigen in Chinese idiopathic MN and that detection of anti-PLA2R is a sensitive test for idiopathic MN.
Serum phospholipase A2 receptor antibodies (SAbs) and glomerular phospholipase A2 receptor antigen (GAg) deposits have been observed in idiopathic membranous nephropathy (IMN). However, the clinical application of these two biomarkers, particularly GAg deposition, needs to be further evaluated. We measured SAb concentration by ELISA and GAg deposition by immunofluorescence in 572 patients with biopsy-proven IMN. Overall, 68.5% of patients (392 of 572) had detectable SAb (SAb+), and 98.7% of patients who were SAb+ (387 of 392) and 70.6% of patients who were SAb- (127 of 180) had GAg deposition (GAg+). Compared with patients who were SAb-/GAg+, patients who were SAb+/GAg+ exhibited higher levels of proteinuria (P<0.001) and a lower chance of proteinuria remission (P<0.001). In 52 patients who underwent repeat biopsies, patients who did not achieve remission had a higher SAb+ rate on the first biopsy than patients who went into remission (P=0.001). Furthermore, SAb+ levels persisted in patients who did not achieve remission but significantly decreased in patients who achieved remission by the second biopsy. Patients who did not achieve remission also had a higher GAg+ rate on the first biopsy than patients who achieved remission (P<0.01). Sustained GAg+ deposits correlated with disease relapse. In conclusion, combining the measurements of SAb levels and detection of GAg deposition may provide additional information regarding diagnoses, treatment response, and disease relapse in patients with IMN.
The introduction of digital pathology to nephrology provides a platform for the development of new methodologies and protocols for visual, morphometric and computer-aided assessment of renal biopsies. Application of digital imaging to pathology made substantial progress over the past decade; it is now in use for education, clinical trials and translational research. Digital pathology evolved as a valuable tool to generate comprehensive structural information in digital form, a key prerequisite for achieving precision pathology for computational biology. The application of this new technology on an international scale is driving novel methods for collaborations, providing unique opportunities but also challenges. Standardization of methods needs to be rigorously evaluated and applied at each step, from specimen processing to scanning, uploading into digital repositories, morphologic, morphometric and computer-aided assessment, data collection and analysis. In this review, we discuss the status and opportunities created by the application of digital imaging to precision nephropathology, and present a vision for the near future.
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