Abstract

Few previous studies have reported immune-complex nephropathy that has not been classified as a specific phenotype in kidney allografts. We report a case of a de novo subclinical "full-house" pattern of deposition in a pediatric transplantation recipient with possible donor-derived IgA deposition. A five-year-old boy underwent living kidney transplantation due to congenital kidney and urinary tract anomalies. A one-hour implantation biopsy revealed IgA deposition. A four-month protocol biopsy finding showed less intense IgA deposition, in contrast with the one-hour biopsy, and trace para-mesangial deposits. A one-year protocol biopsy demonstrated a full-house deposition pattern and massive electron-dense deposits with minor glomerular changes. At the time of the one-year biopsy, kidney function was stable, with no urinalysis abnormalities. No evidence of systemic lupus erythematosus was observed in clinical and serologic examinations. Mesangial IgG, IgM, C3, and C1q deposition was codominant, and IgA deposition was weaker. We diagnosed this case as C1q nephropathy combined with remaining donor-derived IgA deposition. Few studies have reported C1q nephropathy in kidney allograft; further accumulation of cases is required. To distinguish between donor-derived and de novo glomerular lesions, it is important to assess the serial histologic findings of immunofluorescence and electron microscopy. Here, we report a rare case of subclinical C1q nephropathy with possible donor-derived IgA nephropathy.

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