Children who suffer from steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) require aggressive treatment to achieve remission. When intravenous high-dose methylprednisolone fails, calcineurin inhibitors, such as cyclosporine and tacrolimus, are used as the first line of treatment. A significant number of patients with SRNS progress to end-stage renal disease if remission is not achieved. For these children, renal replacement therapy can also be problematic; peritoneal dialysis may be accompanied by significant protein loss through the peritoneal membrane, and kidney allograft transplantation may be complicated by recurrence of SRNS. Plasmapheresis and rituximab were initially used for treatment of recurrent SRNS after transplantation; these are now under consideration as rescue therapies for refractory SRNS. Although the prognosis of SRNS is complicated and unfavorable, intensive treatment in the early stages of the disease may achieve remission in more than half of the patients. Therefore, timely referral of pediatric SRNS patients to pediatric nephrology specialists for histological and genetic diagnosis and treatment is highly recommended.
While most of the children who presented with primary nephrotic syndrome (NS) respond to steroid treatment, 10 to 20% of these children do not achieve remission despite receiving second or third-line of treatment (
A 5-years-old boy was transferred to our center for treatment of steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome. He had developed edema with proteinuria and did not respond to oral steroid treatment. Kidney biopsy revealed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis with segmental mesangial hypercellularity and segmental sclerosis in 7% of glomeruli. To achieve remission, intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy and cyclosporine treatment were attempted (
SRNS is defined as NS that does not respond to one month's treatment with oral prednisolone at a dosage of 60 mg/m2/day. When SRNS is suspected, a meticulous search for the possibility of concurrent infection (e.g., sinusitis and skin infection), drug interaction (e.g., antiepileptic drugs), inappropriate dosage, or compliance problem is necessary. If those possibilities are ruled out, tissue diagnosis from a kidney biopsy is the next step. Histological findings of SRNS are, and occasionally, a secondary glomerulopathy such as amyloidosis is unexpectedly found. At the same time, mutational analysis for genes known to cause SRNS is recommended. Mutations of
When oral prednisolone treatment fails, intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy (30 mg/kg, every other day, 6 doses in total) is commonly tried. The original treatment protocol developed by Mendoza et al.
Cyclosporine and tacrolimus (FK-506) were originally introduced as immunosuppressive agents for allograft transplantation due to their inhibitory effect on calcineurin, a key signal transduction molecule activating T lymphocytes. In the past, the anti-proteinuric effect of calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) was believed to arise from their immunosuppressive effect on lymphocytes
Another CNI, tacrolimus, is also used in the treatment of SRNS, although Korean Food and Drug Administration has not approved this medication for treatment of NS
While cyclophosphamide or chlorambucyl have been used in early reports; however, a recent review by the Children's Nephrotic Syndrome Consensus Conference concluded that these alkylating agents were not superior to steroid mono-therapy
Despite various treatments, the patient's proteinuria and hypoalbuminemia did not disappear and instead progressed to endstage renal disease (ESRD) in 2 years and 1 month (
When kidney function deteriorates and progresses to ESRD, there are 3 options for renal replacement: hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, and transplantation. Peritoneal dialysis requires less strict diet control and enables a more flexible life style; therefore, peritoneal dialysis is preferred to hemodialysis in pediatric patients, despite the risk of complicating peritonitis. Protein loss through the kidneys in children with SRNS diminishes with the deterioration of kidney function and their intractable edema improves accordingly. On peritoneal dialysis. However, protein loss through the peritoneal membrane may develop with peritoneal dialysis, especially in children with SRNS, as documented at our center
Kidney transplantation is by far the most advantageous modality of renal replacement for children, since only with kidney transplantation normal or near-normal growth can be achieved only with kidney transplantation. Currently, the outcomes of kidney transplantation are excellent with one-year survival of 93%, 10-year survival rates of around ~80%, and a median graft survival time of >15 years. However, children with SRNSrun the risk of recurrence of NS following transplantation, as illustrated in the case. Recurrence often precipitates delayed graft function, acute rejection, and poor graft outcomes
Risk factors for SRNS recurrence following transplantation include childhood-onset SRNS, age of onset greater than 5-6 years, rapid progression to ESRD, and recurrence following a previous allograft
Recurrence often develops within 48 hours of transplantation. Other possible diagnoses of post-transplant proteinuria include chronic allograft rejection, de novo glomerulopathy, and proteinuria from the native kidneys. Nevertheless, significant proteinuria following kidney transplantation in SRNS patients should be presumed to be a recurrence. In this case, aggressive and timely treatment with plasmapheresis and/or high-dose cyclosporine (250 to 350 ng/mL) or rituximab is required, since treatment within 48 hours of recurrence is the only modifiable factor that can effect the remission of recurrent SRNS. For prompt detection of recurrence, meticulous monitoring of pediatric SRNS patients is required following kidney transplantation; urinalysis with protein quantitation must be performed everyday for 2 weeks after transplantation, followed by testing once a week for 1 month, then once a month for 1 year
Observations of SRNS recurrence following graft resulted in the introduction of the concept of a 'circulating permeability factor' as a pathogenic mechanism of SRNS
Reports of favorable outcomes of plasmapheresis in patients with recurrent SRNS resulted in the application of this treatment modality in primary SRNS of native kidneys, with success in some cases
Rituximab is a monoclonal antibody against CD20, a marker of B cells, which is manufactured as a therapeutic agent for B cell lymphoma. Following the report of a case of post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease where rituximab treatment eradicated both recurrent SRNS and B cell lymphoma after kidney transplantation
The patient was treated with plasmapheresis and his proteinuria and hypoalbuminemia improved gradually. To eradicate his nephrotic syndrome, we gave him one dose of rituximab, and complete remission was achieved. He has been in a state of remission for more than two years.
Although the prognosis of SRNS is complicated and unfavorable, intensive treatment in the early stage of the disease may achieve remission in more than half of the patients. Thus, timely referral of these patients to pediatric nephrology specialists for histological and genetic diagnosis and treatment is highly recommended.
This study was supported by a grant from the Korea Healthcare Technology R&D Project, Ministry for Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea (A080588).
Outcomes of childhood-onset nephrotic syndrome. Tx, treatment; ESRD, end-stage renal disease; D/C, steroid discontinuation.
Clinical course of a case of steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome. Cr, creatinine.
Approach of childhood-onset nephrotic syndrome. NS, nephrotic syndrome; GHU, Gross hematuria; BP, blood pressure; FANA, fluorescent antinuclear antibody test; HBV, Hepatitis B virus; HCV, Hepatitis C virus; HIV, Human immunodeficiency virus; PPD, purified protein derivative.
Clinical course of the case after kidney transplantation. U/A, urinalysis; Alb, albumin; P/E, plasmapheresis