Abstract

Although the pivotal role of activation of the intrarenal renin-angiotensin system (RAS) has been demonstrated in the rat model of chronic cyclosporine (CyA) nephropathy, it is still unclear whether intrarenal RAS activation is responsible for chronic CyA nephropathy in humans. Therefore, the distribution of renin in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded renal biopsy specimens obtained from 26 children who had idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (NS) and who were treated with long-term moderate-dose CyA was examined with the use of immunohistochemistry with rabbit polyclonal anti-human renin antibody. Nineteen patients had steroid-dependent NS, and 7 had steroid-resistant NS. However, CyA treatment led all of the latter patients into complete remission. All of the patients underwent renal biopsies at the start and the end of CyA treatment. In the pre-CyA specimens, immunoreactivity to renin was detected mainly in those parts of arterioles within the anatomically well-defined juxtaglomerular apparatus. In the post-CyA specimens, it was also detected in those parts of the vessels upstream from the juxtaglomerular apparatus. Moreover, the ratio of the number of renin-positive cells to the number of glomeruli (histologic renin index) increased significantly with long-term CyA treatment (from 1.26+/-0.24 to 4.30+/-0.40, P<0.0001). Eleven of the post-CyA specimens showed mild or moderate CyA-associated arteriolopathy (CAA), whereas 15 showed no CAA. The histologic renin index was significantly higher in specimens with CAA than in those without CAA (5.16+/-0.59 versus 3.67+/-0.48, P = 0.031). Seven CAA-positive patients underwent repeat biopsies 6 to 12 mo after discontinuing the CyA. Their specimens showed an improvement in the CAA and significantly lower histologic renin index compared with the post-CyA (from 4.18+/-0.69 to 2.10+/-0.25, P = 0.018). Eleven of the post-CyA specimens showed mild to moderate interstitial fibrosis, and 15 showed no fibrosis. There was no significant difference in immunoreactivity to renin between the specimens with interstitial fibrosis and those without. However, patients with interstitial fibrosis had significantly longer periods of heavy proteinuria during CyA therapy, because of either steroid-resistant NS or frequent relapses of NS (83+/-18 versus 35+/-12 d, P = 0.030). These findings indicate that long-term CyA treatment for idiopathic NS in children may stimulate renin production in arterioles. They also suggest that CyA-stimulated intrarenal RAS activation is responsible for the development of CAA and that CyA-induced interstitial fibrosis is potentiated by long-term heavy proteinuria and is at least partly independent of CyA-stimulated intrarenal RAS activation.

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