Abstract

Animal experiments have shown that anti-GBM antibodies play a pathogenic role in anti-GBM disease. However, the relationship between anti-GBM antibody levels and kidney outcomes in patients with anti-GBM disease is unclear. We performed a retrospective analysis of 110 patients diagnosed with anti-GBM disease. We compared their baseline characteristics stratifying on different anti-GBM antibody levels, and used Cox regression analysis to analyze the correlation between antibody levels and kidney survival. We further selected 69 patients to evaluate the modification of antibody titersover 14daysof treatment, then compared kidney survival of patients in the group with antibody level decrease < 48% to those with antibody decrease ≥ 48%. The 110 patients had a median follow-up of 27.1 (Q1-Q3: 7.9-80.1) months, and among them 90 (81.8%) developed kidney failure. Multivariate analysis suggested that anti-GBM antibody level was an independent risk factor for progression to kidney failure in patients with anti-GBM disease (HR 1.08, 95% CI 1.01-1.16). The patients who reduced the antibodies levelsquickly had better kidney survival than those who did not, and multivariate analysis also indicated that antibody decrease rate was related to kidney outcomes. Anti-GBM antibody level is closely related to kidney outcomes in patients with anti-GBM disease, and short-term reduction of antibodies can be beneficial to improving kidney outcomes.

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