Abstract

Thrombospondin type 1 domain-containing 7A (THSD7A) is a recently identified target antigen of idiopathic membranous nephropathy (iMN). The clinicopathological characteristics of THSD7A-associated MN are poorly characterised due to low prevalence among MN patients. Among 469 consecutive cases of pathologically confirmed MN diagnosed at four centres in Japan, 14 cases were confirmed positive for THSD7A by immunohistochemistry (3.0%). The prevalence of THSD7A-associated MN tended to be higher in northern Japan. Most cases demonstrated nephrotic-range proteinuria (12/14 cases, 86%). In two patients, cancer was detected at the time of renal biopsy (small-cell carcinoma of the lung and prostatic adenocarcinoma with neuroendocrine differentiation). Both tumours were negative for THSD7A. Four patients had concurrent or previous incidence of allergic diseases, including one patient with Kimura’s disease. Pathological analysis of kidney biopsy tissue revealed slight mesangial cell proliferation in three cases and spike formation in one case. Immunofluorescence studies demonstrated that IgG subclass was mainly IgG4-dominant/codominant (12/13, 92% cases), while the case with prostatic cancer had an IgG2-dominant distribution. The immunostaining profile for components of the lectin complement pathways was not significant in three cases including two patients with malignancy. One case was dual positive for THSD7A and PLA2R. Of 10 cases with known clinical follow-up data, 6 demonstrated reduced serum creatinine and 8 presented reduced proteinuria. In summary, although the major IgG phenotype was usually IgG4-dominant/codominant, clinical background was otherwise heterogeneous. Further investigation of regional differences in THSD7A-associated MN prevalence may reveal genetic and environmental risk factor and associated pathogenic mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Membranous nephropathy (MN) is the major cause of adultonset idiopathic nephrotic syndrome

  • No THSD7Aassociated MN cases were diagnosed at Fukuoka University Hospital

  • Two cases were accompanied by malignancy at the time of renal biopsy, one with lung small-cell carcinoma and the other with prostatic adenocarcinoma with neuroendocrine differentiation

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Summary

Introduction

Membranous nephropathy (MN) is the major cause of adultonset idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. MN is characterised by subepithelial immune complex deposition, causing spike formation or a bubbling appearance in glomerular basement membranes under light microscopic examination. Virchows Arch (2019) 474:735–743 is generally termed ‘secondary’ MN (sMN). Autoimmune diseases, drugs, infections and malignant disease are the established causes of sMN [1], while MN that lacks specific clinical aetiology has been termed ‘idiopathic’ MN (iMN). Differentiation between iMN and sMN is a critical step for determining the optimal treatment strategy

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