CMV infection is associated with vascular damage, and the vascular damage during CMV infection is enhanced if patients experienced acute rejection before CMV infection.
Abstract. Previously, it was found that patients with necrotizing crescentic glomerulonephritis (NCGN) and anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) directed against proteinase 3 (anti-PR3) had a faster deterioration of renal function and more active renal vasculitic lesions than patients with ANCA directed against myeloperoxidase (anti-MPO). Because ANCA-mediated neutrophil activation is thought to play an important role in the pathophysiology of this form of glomerulonephritis, this study was conducted to determine whether anti-PR3 are capable of inducing a more pronounced activation of neutrophils in vitro than anti-MPO. To test this hypothesis, the release of reactive oxygen radicals, as assessed by ferricytochrome c reduction and by dihydrorhodamine 123 oxidation, and the release of granule constituents from healthy donor neutrophils upon stimulation with IgG fractions were measured from 17 anti-PR3- and 14 anti-MPO-positive patients with active NCGN. Patients with anti-PR3 had a higher renal activity index (P < 0.05) compared with patients with anti-MPO. IgG fractions from anti-PR3-positive patients induced more oxygen radical release from tumor necrosis factor-α-primed neutrophils compared with IgG fractions from anti-MPO-positive patients, as assessed by ferricytochrome c reduction (P < 0.05) and dihydrorhodamine 123 oxidation (P < 0.01). In addition, IgG fractions from anti-PR3-positive patients generated more neutrophil degranulation of β-glucuronidase (P < 0.01) than IgG fractions from anti-MPO-positive patients. In conclusion, IgG fractions from anti-PR3-positive patients with NCGN are more potent activators of the respiratory burst and degranulation in vitro than IgG fractions from anti-MPO-positive patients. These observations may be relevant in view of the clinical differences between anti-PR3- and anti-MPO-positive patients with NCGN.
Patients with anti-myeloperoxidase (MPO)-associated necrotizing crescentic glomerulonephritis (NCGN) may develop chronic renal failure (CRF) leading to end-stage renal disease despite an initially favorable response to treatment. The aim of this study was to determine the prognostic value of clinical, laboratory, and histopathologic features at the time of presentation and during follow-up for the development of CRF in 21 consecutive anti-MPO-positive patients with NCGN. Renal function did not recover in two of five patients who were dialysis-dependent at presentation. The remaining 19 patients all went into remission and were off dialysis at 3 mo after diagnosis. At long-term follow-up, nine of these patients had stable renal function and did not relapse (group A), five patients developed CRF without signs of relapse (group B), and five patients relapsed (group C). At diagnosis, serum creatinine, C-reactive protein, and anti-MPO levels did not differ between groups A, B, and C. Microscopic erythrocyturia resolved in all patients within 4 mo of treatment. BP at presentation and during follow-up did not differ between groups A, B, and C. Proteinuria at diagnosis and in the first 6 mo after diagnosis was higher in patients who developed CRF than in patients with a stable renal function. Anti-MPO levels at 3 mo had decreased compared with anti-MPO levels at diagnosis in groups A and C, whereas anti-MPO levels did not fall significantly in patients who developed CRF. The predictive value of a renal biopsy at diagnosis on long-term renal outcome was limited. In conclusion, a higher degree of proteinuria at diagnosis and during follow-up as well as persistently elevated anti-MPO levels after induction of remission are associated with the development of CRF and are predictive of poor renal outcome in anti-MPO-associated NCGN.
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