Abstract

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) is a growth-promoting peptide that is synthesized in the distal tubules of the kidney and excreted in urine. EGF has been suggested to play a role in the repair after renal tissue damage, as well as in compensatory growth of the remaining kidney after uninephrectomy. The present study examined the urinary EGF excretion after uninephrectomy and transplantation among relatives. The urinary EGF excretion rate and the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were followed for 26-54 days in 16 healthy kidney donors and nine recipients. After uninephrectomy the median urinary EGF excretion rate in the donors was not 50% of the pre-operative value, but around 65% (95% confidence limits of the median on the fifth post-operative day: 59-72%). This suggests that there is a compensatory increase in the EGF excretion rate from the remaining kidney of around 30% after uninephrectomy. A similar compensatory increase was demonstrated for GFR, indicating that the compensatory changes in EGF excretion rate and GFR might be correlated. In the transplanted kidneys, GFR was consistently around 15% lower and EGF excretion rate around 40% lower than in the corresponding kidneys remaining in the donors. This might reflect ischaemic and drug-induced damage of the transplanted kidneys. The present study demonstrated a compensatory increase of around 30% in urinary EGF excretion from the remaining kidney after uninephrectomy in healthy humans. Whether EGF plays a role in the adaptive processes in the remaining kidney or whether changes in EGF excretion are merely of a secondary nature is still uncertain.

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