C3 glomerulopathy - understanding a rare complement-driven renal disease

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_ACB8186CB94F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
C3 glomerulopathy - understanding a rare complement-driven renal disease
Journal
Nat Rev Nephrol
Author(s)
Smith R. J. H., Appel G. B., Blom A. M., Cook H. T., D'Agati V. D., Fakhouri F., Fremeaux-Bacchi V., Jozsi M., Kavanagh D., Lambris J. D., Noris M., Pickering M. C., Remuzzi G., de Cordoba S. R., Sethi S., Van der Vlag J., Zipfel P. F., Nester C. M.
ISSN
1759-507X (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1759-5061
Publication state
Published
Issued date
03/2019
Volume
15
Number
3
Pages
129-143
Language
english
Notes
Smith, Richard J H
Appel, Gerald B
Blom, Anna M
Cook, H Terence
D'Agati, Vivette D
Fakhouri, Fadi
Fremeaux-Bacchi, Veronique
Jozsi, Mihaly
Kavanagh, David
Lambris, John D
Noris, Marina
Pickering, Matthew C
Remuzzi, Giuseppe
de Cordoba, Santiago Rodriguez
Sethi, Sanjeev
Van der Vlag, Johan
Zipfel, Peter F
Nester, Carla M
eng
WT_/Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom
R01 DK110023/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review
England
Nat Rev Nephrol. 2019 Mar;15(3):129-143. doi: 10.1038/s41581-018-0107-2.
Abstract
The C3 glomerulopathies are a group of rare kidney diseases characterized by complement dysregulation occurring in the fluid phase and in the glomerular microenvironment, which results in prominent complement C3 deposition in kidney biopsy samples. The two major subgroups of C3 glomerulopathy - dense deposit disease (DDD) and C3 glomerulonephritis (C3GN) - have overlapping clinical and pathological features suggestive of a disease continuum. Dysregulation of the complement alternative pathway is fundamental to the manifestations of C3 glomerulopathy, although terminal pathway dysregulation is also common. Disease is driven by acquired factors in most patients - namely, autoantibodies that target the C3 or C5 convertases. These autoantibodies drive complement dysregulation by increasing the half-life of these vital but normally short-lived enzymes. Genetic variation in complement-related genes is a less frequent cause. No disease-specific treatments are available, although immunosuppressive agents and terminal complement pathway blockers are helpful in some patients. Unfortunately, no treatment is universally effective or curative. In aggregate, the limited data on renal transplantation point to a high risk of disease recurrence (both DDD and C3GN) in allograft recipients. Clinical trials are underway to test the efficacy of several first-generation drugs that target the alternative complement pathway.
Keywords
Autoantibodies/immunology, *Autoimmunity, Biopsy, Complement C3/*immunology/metabolism, Humans, Kidney Diseases/*immunology/metabolism, Kidney Glomerulus/metabolism/*pathology, Rare Diseases
Pubmed
Create date
01/03/2022 11:17
Last modification date
02/03/2022 7:36
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