Abstract

A kidney biopsy is preferred for the diagnosis of ANCA-associated vasculitis with renal involvement. The aim of our study was to evaluate the prognostic value of a histopathologic classification scheme recently proposed by an international consortium of renal pathologists in a large Norwegian cohort. Patients diagnosed with ANCA-associated GN were included from the Norwegian Kidney Biopsy Registry 1991-2012. Renal morphology was classified as focal, mixed, crescentic, or sclerotic. Study end point was ESRD. Patients were followed from kidney biopsy to end of 2012. Two hundred fifty patients with ≥10 glomeruli in the biopsy were included in our study. During a median follow-up of 3.5 years (0.7-7.6), 60 cases of ESRD occurred. Ninety-six (38%) biopsies were classified as focal, 61 (24%) biopsies were classified as mixed, 71 (28%) biopsies were classified as crescentic, and 22 (9%) biopsies were classified as sclerotic; 1- and 5-year cumulative renal survival rates were 96% and 90%, respectively, for the focal class, 86% and 75%, respectively, for the mixed class, 81% and 69%, respectively, for the crescentic class, and 56% and 51%, respectively, for the sclerotic class. By multivariate Cox regression analyses, the sclerotic class had a significantly worse renal prognosis than the focal (hazard ratio, 9.65; 95% confidence interval, 2.38 to 39.16) or combined mixed/crescentic classes (hazard ratio, 3.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.41 to 7.61), but no significant differences in outcome were observed in the crescentic class compared with the mixed class (hazard ratio, 1.13; 95% confidence interval, 0.44 to 2.87) or the combined mixed/crescentic class compared with the focal class (hazard ratio, 1.93; 95% confidence interval, 0.61 to 6.12). Accuracy by receiver operator characteristic curve analysis was estimated to be 0.72 (95% confidence interval, 0.65 to 0.80). In 108 additional patients with three to nine glomeruli in the biopsy, the prognostic value of this classification scheme was unchanged. The histopathologic classification is a predictor of renal outcome of moderate quality. Merging the mixed and crescentic classes in the future could simplify the scheme.

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