Abstract

Immunosuppressive therapy plays an important role in patients with high-risk idiopathic membranous nephropathy (IMN), but the therapeutic modality is still controversial. Corticosteroid combined with oral tacrolimus (TAC, target trough blood concentration of 4-8ng/mL), intravenous cyclophosphamide (CYC, 750mg/m(2)/mo, or oral mycophenolate mofetil (MMF, 1.5-2.0g/d) were randomly administered for 9 months to 90 patients with IMN proved with renal biopsy with severe proteinuria (>8g/d). Eighty-six of the 90 patients completed the study. The total remission (TR) rates in the TAC group were significantly higher than those in the CYC group at 1 and 2 months (p<0.01) and the MMF group at 1-4 months (p<0.01). The TR rates were 83.3%, 73.3%, and 70.0% in the TAC, CYC, and MMF groups at 9 months (p=0.457), and there were no significant differences between the three groups from 5 to 9 months. Furthermore, TAC reduced proteinuria and ameliorated hypoalbuminemia more quickly and effectively than CYC and MMF. We observed no severe adverse events in the three groups. Tacrolimus combined with corticosteroid had tolerable adverse effects and induced the remission of IMN more effectively and more rapidly. This is the first prospective randomized cohort study to compare three different therapies in patients at high risk for IMN. It provides strong evidence for choosing optimal treatment for patients with IMN. The long-term efficacy of this treatment strategy should be investigated further in future studies.

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