J Korean Soc Pediatr Nephrol.  2004 Oct;8(2):176-185.

A Clinicopathological Study of Rapidly Progressive Glomerulonephritis in Children

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. cheonghi@plaza.snu.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE: Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) is a clinicopathologic entity characterized by extensive crescent formation and rapid deterioration of renal function within few months. For better understanding of its clinical course and designing better treatment strategies, a clinicopathological study of childhood RPGN was performed.
METHODS
The clinical manifestations and pathological findings were reviewed retro spectively in 12 children who were diagnosed as having RPGN by clinical manifestations and renal biopsy during a period from 1991 to 2003. Several clinicopathological parameters were analyzed as prognostic factors.
RESULTS
Among a total of 12 patients, 4 were male and 8 were female. The median onset age was 11.5 years(range 5.5-14.6 years), and the median period of follow-up was 25 months(range 7 months-6.6 years). According to the pathological classification, 10 patients (83%) were type II RPGN(immune-complex mediated glomerulonephritis), 2 patients were type III RPGN(pauci-immune glomerulonephritis), and none was type I RPGN(anti-glome rular basement membrane nephritis). All patients were treated with oral steroid in various combinations with methylprednisolone pulse therapy(10 patients, 83%), cyclophosphamide(8 patients, 67%), or plasmapheresis(4 patients, 33%). Clinical outcomes of 12 patients were complete remission in 1(8%), end-stage renal disease in 2(17%), chronic renal insufficiency with persistent proteinuria in 2(17%), and normal renal function with persistent proteinuria in 7(58%) at the last follow-up. Poor prognosis is associated with increased serum creatinine level, severe anemia and younger age at the time of diagnosis.
CONCLUSION
Immune-complex mediated glomerulonephritis is the major cause RPGN in children and most cases showed improvement of renal function with aggressive management. For better understanding of this rare disease, a prospective multicenter study should be done.

Keyword

Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis; Children; Crescent; Prognostic factor

MeSH Terms

Age of Onset
Anemia
Basement Membrane
Biopsy
Child*
Classification
Creatinine
Diagnosis
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Glomerulonephritis*
Humans
Kidney Failure, Chronic
Male
Methylprednisolone
Prognosis
Proteinuria
Rare Diseases
Renal Insufficiency, Chronic
Creatinine
Methylprednisolone
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