Advanced search×

A 25-year experience with pediatric anti-glomerular basement membrane disease.

Pediatr Nephrol 26(1):85-91 (2011) PMID 20963446

Anti-glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) disease, which is extremely uncommon in children, is characterized by rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) and autoantibodies against GBM collagen. Pulmonary hemorrhage is the third component in Goodpasture Syndrome. Cigarette smoking and exposure to hydrocarbons have been linked to anti-GBM disease in adults, but such an association has not been established in children. We reviewed renal biopsy and autopsy specimens over 25 years from a major tertiary care U.S. children's hospital, diagnosing anti-GBM by clinical RPGN, crescentic glomerulonephritis, and linear immunofluorescence (IF) immunoglobulin G staining in patients under 18 years of age. We identified four patients, with and without pulmonary manifestations. The sole autopsy case showed diagnostic IF despite undetectable serum anti-GBM antibodies and positive testing for serum anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA). Three patients have survived 1-18 years following diagnosis, one of whom is recovering renal function. One adolescent had a history of smoking cigarettes and one had a probable hydrocarbon exposure. Anti-GBM disease is unusual in children, and the relationship to inhaled agents is incompletely understood. Serum anti-GBM antibodies are typically present, but cases with undetectable levels can occur. Some patients are anti-GBM and ANCA positive, with a small subset ANCA-positive, anti-GBM-negative. Ours is the first such described pediatric case.

DOI: 10.1007/s00467-010-1663-2
Version: za2963e q8za7 q8zbe q8zcc q8zd6 q8ze1 q8zf6 q8zg1

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Goodpasture's disease: molecular architecture of the autoantigen provides clues to etiology and pathogenesis.

    Curr Opin Nephrol Hypertens 20(3):290-6 (2011) PMID 21378566

    Goodpasture's disease is an autoimmune disorder characterized by the deposition of pathogenic autoantibodies in basement membranes of kidney and lung, which induces rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis and pulmonary hemorrhage. The target antigen is the α3NC1 domain of collagen IV, which is expres...
  2. Goodpasture's disease: molecular architecture of the autoantigen provides clues to etiology and pathogenesis.

    Curr Opin Nephrol Hypertens 20(3):290-6 (2011) PMID 21378566

    Analysis of the specificity of Goodpasture's autoantibodies revealed a distinct subset of circulating and kidney-bound antiα5NC1 antibody, which is associated with loss of kidney function. Structural integrity of the α345NC1 hexamer is stabilized by the novel sulfilimine crosslinks conferring immu...
  3. Molecular architecture of the Goodpasture autoantigen in anti-GBM nephritis.

    N Engl J Med 363(4):343-54 (2010) PMID 20660402

    The development of Goodpasture's disease may be considered an autoimmune "conformeropathy" that involves perturbation of the quaternary structure of the alpha345NC1 hexamer, inducing a pathogenic conformational change in the alpha3NC1 and alpha5NC1 subunits, which in turn elicits an autoimmune respo...