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Biomarkers for the Progression of IgA Nephropathy

I

Istanbul University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Glomerular Diseases
IgA Nephropathy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

IgA nephropathy (IgAN) is the most prevalent primary glomerular disease worldwide and an important cause of end stage renal disease. IgAN has an incidence of 8-25 new cases/year/per million age-related population in adults and 3-5/new cases/year/per million age-related population in children and progresses to need of renal replacement treatment in 5-15% at 10 years and in about 20% at 20 years. The variability of the clinical course anticipates different treatment options. There is an absolute need of validated biomarkers to predict risk of progression and indication for treatment at early stages, when lesions can be reversible. This study aimed to evaluate IgAN progression and its histological and clinical correlates.

Full description

IgA nephropathy is the most prevalent primary glomerular disease worldwide and an important cause of end stage renal disease. Clinical course varies from long term stable renal functions with minimal proteinuria and microscopic hematuria to rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis with crescents on renal biopsy which progresses to end stage renal disease in a very short time.

In current practice the diagnosis is made with renal biopsy. A less invasive procedure for diagnosis is not present and no serum biomarkers for clinical follow-up, treatment response and prognosis are available. For that reason follow-up of the disease is enabled with indirect markers of renal function like proteinuria, serum creatinine and glomerular filtration rate. These markers are not specific for IgA nephropathy. The lack of disease specific markers hinders the standardization of patient follow-up and treatment. Development of specific and sensitive, repeatable, histopathological and clinical markers for diagnosis, follow up and treatment response in IgA nephropathy the most prevalent primary glomerular disease affecting many patients worldwide will offer prospects of diagnosis and improved prognostication.

Enrollment

120 patients

Sex

All

Ages

16 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with biopsy-proven IgA nephropathy (defined by standard criteria)

  • Patients at all ages will be included regardless of treatment given

  • A renal biopsy available for reviewing must include 8 or more glomeruli.

  • At least 3 measurements of blood pressure, serum creatinine and proteinuria have to be performed.

  • The first measurement should be within 3 months of the date of renal biopsy and the last at the end of the follow-up.

  • Patients must comply with the following criteria

    1. have a follow-up longer than 1 year
    2. or having progressed to end-stage renal disease regardless of the duration of follow-up.
  • Patients who have received antihypertensive or immunosuppressive medication will be included as well.

Exclusion criteria

  • Diabetes at the time of first kidney biopsy.
  • Solid organ (other than kidney) or bone marrow transplant at the time of biopsy.
  • Other pre-existing parenchymal kidney disease on first kidney biopsy, determined by the pathology examination.
  • Diagnosis of any of the following diseases from the time of biopsy to the time of enrollment: Systemic lupus erythematosus, HIV infection, active malignancy, except for non-melanoma skin cancer, active hepatitis B or C infection, defined as positive viral load
  • Patients with life expectancy < 6 months
  • Patients who are unwilling or unable to consent.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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