Abstract

Objective: To determine whether there is an association between microhematuria and relapse or kidney disease progression in patients with primary membranous nephropathy (PMN).Methods: A cohort of 639 patients with biopsy-proven PMN from two centers was followed for a median of 40 months. The exposures were initial hematuria, time-averaged hematuria, and cumulative duration of hematuria. The outcomes were relapse and renal progression, which were defined by a 40% reduction in renal function or end-stage renal disease. Cox proportional hazards regression and competing risk analyses were performed to yield hazard ratios (HRs) and subdistribution hazard ratios (sHRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Sensitivity and interaction analyses were also performed.Results: After adjusting for confounders, a higher level of initial hematuria was associated with a 1.43 (95% CI, 1.15–1.78) greater hazard of relapse. Worsening hematuria remarkably increased the risk of short-term relapse (HR, 4.64; 3.29–6.54). Time-averaged hematuria (sHR, 1.35; 1.12–1.63) and cumulative duration of hematuria (sHR, 1.17; 1.02–1.34) were independent predictors of renal progression. Hematuria remission was related to a reduced risk of renal progression over time in patients with positive microhematuria (sHR, 0.63; 0.41–0.96).Conclusions: A higher level of initial hematuria was a remarkable predictor of relapse in patients with PMN, and the magnitude and persistence of microhematuria were independently associated with kidney disease progression.

Highlights

  • Glomerulonephritis (GN) may be caused by problems with the body’s immune system

  • Death without renal progression was treated as a competing event

  • Data were missing for 4.69% (30/639) and 0.78% (5/639) of patients for body mass index and microhematuria, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Damage to the glomeruli causes blood and protein loss in the urine. The significance of hematuria in the natural history of renal disease is not clear [4,5,6]. Prognostic Relevance of Microhematuria in PMN stable hematuria is a benign lesion resulting from prior kidney damage [5, 6]. Several studies showed that persistent hematuria was independently associated with kidney disease progression among patients with IgAN [7,8,9]. Another study suggested that the presence of persistent hematuria, but not proteinuria, was a significant predictor of renal relapse in patients with AAV and kidney involvement [10]

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