Abstract

IntroductionUnlike idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (NS), hereditary podocytopathies are not expected to recur after kidney transplantation. However, some reports of post-transplant recurrence of NS in patients carrying variants in the NPHS2 gene have been described, notably with the p.Arg138Gln variant, which is more prevalent in Europe. The objective of this study was to assess the risk of recurrence after kidney transplantation in a large cohort of patients with biallelic NPHS2 pathogenic variants. MethodsSince January 2010, 61 patients identified at Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital and 56 enrolled in the PodoNet Registry with biallelic variants in the NPHS2 gene were transplanted and were compared with 44 transplanted children with steroid-resistant NS (SRNS) without any identified pathogenic variant. ResultsOf the 117 patients, 23 carried the p.Arg138Gln variant in the homozygous state and 16 in the compound heterozygous state. The additional 78 patients carried other variants in the homozygous (n=44) or compound heterozygous state. Only one patient with NPHS2-related SRNS experienced post-transplant recurrence (median follow-up of cohort 8.5 years [2.5-15]). Conversely, 7/44 (16%) patients without any identified pathogenic variant recurred within a maximum of 7 days after transplantation (median follow-up 8.9 years [0.6-13.9]). ConclusionIn this large cohort, the risk of patients with causative variants in the NPHS2 gene to develop NS recurrence after kidney transplantation was extremely low. This is coherent with the pathophysiology of intrinsic slit-diaphragm disease. These data are reassuring and should be taken into account when counselling patients, making living kidney donation, whether related or not, a safe choice.

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