Abstract

BackgroundThe value of urinary mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) for assessing kidney injury of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV) was investigated. MethodsThirty-nine kidney biopsy-proved myeloperoxidase (MPO)-ANCA associated AAV patients were enrolled and analyzed. ResultsThe average urinary mtDNA of patients was significantly higher than that of normal controls (3372.74 ± 1859.72 vs. 474.90 ± 123.59 copy/nmol creatinine, p < 0.001). The patients who needed dialysis at disease onset had the highest levels of urinary mtDNA (5072.23 ± 1302.87 copy/nmol creatinine). Urinary mtDNA positively correlated with urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (R = 0.661, P < 0.001) and negatively correlated with estimated glomerular filtration rate (R = −0.515, P = 0.001). The urinary mtDNA level of crescentic class (4703.08 ± 1744.31 copy/nmol creatinine) was higher than that of mixed class (3258.14 ± 1158.99 copy/nmol creatinine) and focal class (2268.15 ± 1897.63 copy/nmol creatinine). Univariate correlation analysis showed urinary mtDNA positively correlated with interstitial neutrophils (R = 0.471, P = 0.048) and glomerular neutrophils (R = 0.673, P = 0.002) in kidney biopsy. Among 13 patients who needed hemodialysis at disease onset, 10 patients who got renal recovery had higher urinary mtDNA than 3 patients who remained dialysis dependent (5455.20 ± 1174.64 vs. 3795.67 ± 893.34 copy/nmol creatinine, p = 0.047). ConclusionsUrinary mtDNA increases in AAV with kidney injury, and its levels correlate with the severity of kidney injury and neutrophils infiltration in pathology.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call