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Long-Term Outcome of Anti-Glomerular Basement Membrane Antibody Disease Treated with Immunoadsorption
Authors:Peter Biesenbach  Renate Kain  Kurt Derfler  Thomas Perkmann  Afschin Soleiman  Alexandra Benharkou  Wilfred Druml  Andrew Rees  Marcus D. S?emann
Affiliation:1. Internal Medicine III/Clinical Division of Nephrology & Dialysis, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.; 2. Clinical Institute of Pathology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.; 3. Department of Laboratory Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.; National Center for Scientific Research Demokritos, Greece,
Abstract:

Background

Anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) antibody disease may lead to acute crescentic glomerulonephritis with poor renal prognosis. Current therapy favours plasma exchange (PE) for removal of pathogenic antibodies. Immunoadsorption (IAS) is superior to PE regarding efficiency of antibody-removal and safety. Apart from anecdotal data, there is no systemic analysis of the long-term effects of IAS on anti-GBM-disease and antibody kinetics.

Objective

To examine the long-term effect of high-frequency IAS combined with standard immunosuppression on patient and renal survival in patients with anti-GBM-disease and to quantify antibody removal and kinetics through IAS.

Design

Retrospective review of patients treated with IAS for anti-GBM-antibody disease confirmed by biopsy and/or anti-GBM-antibodies.

Setting

University Hospital of Vienna, Austria.

Participants

10 patients with anti-GBM-disease treated with IAS.

Measurements

Patient and renal survival, renal histology, anti-GBM-antibodies.

Results

Anti-GBM-antibodies were reduced by the first 9 IAS treatments (mean number of 23) to negative levels in all patients. Renal survival was 40% at diagnosis, 70% after the end of IAS, 63% after one year and 50% at the end of observation (mean 84 months, range 9 to 186). Dialysis dependency was successfully reversed in three of six patients. Patient survival was 90% at the end of observation.

Conclusion

IAS efficiently eliminates anti-GBM-antibodies suggesting non-inferiority to PE with regard to renal and patient survival. Hence IAS should be considered as a valuable treatment option for anti-GBM-disease, especially in patients presenting with a high percentage of crescents and dialysis dependency due to an unusual high proportion of responders.
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