Steroids, the mainstay of treatment for nephrotic syndrome in children, have multiple adverse effects including growth suppression.
Anthropometric measurements in children < 18 years enrolled in the ...Nephrotic Syndrome Study Network (NEPTUNE) were collected. The longitudinal association of medication exposure and nephrotic syndrome characteristics with height z-score and growth velocity was determined using adjusted Generalized Estimating Equation regression and linear regression.
A total of 318 children (57.2% males) with a baseline age of 7.64 ± 5.04 years were analyzed. The cumulative steroid dose was 216.4 (IQR 61.5, 652.7) mg/kg (N = 233). Overall, height z-scores were not significantly different at the last follow-up compared to baseline (- 0.13 ± 1.21 vs. - 0.23 ± 1.71, p = 0.21). In models adjusted for age, sex, and eGFR, greater cumulative steroid exposure (β - 7.5 × 10
, CI - 1.2 × 10
, - 3 × 10
, p = 0.001) and incident cases of NS (vs. prevalent) (β - 1.1, CI - 2.22, - 0.11, p = 0.03) were significantly associated with lower height z-scores over time. Rituximab exposure was associated with higher height z-scores (β 0.16, CI 0.04, 0.29, p = 0.01) over time.
Steroid dose was associated with lower height z-score, while rituximab use was associated with higher height z-score.
Introduction
Recurrent focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) in kidney transplant recipients is associated with lower graft survival and increased morbidity. There are limited data to guide ...the decision to re‐transplant patients with transplant failure due to FSGS recurrence. We aimed to evaluate outcomes in patients re‐transplanted after having initial graft failure due to recurrent FSGS and to study physician attitudes and practice patterns.
Methods
Retrospective data from 10 centers were collected on 20 patients transplanted between January 1997 and September 2018. A survey was sent to nephrologist members of the Pediatric Nephrology Research Consortium.
Results
Mean patient age (years) was 9.8 ± 4.8 at first transplant and 15.9 ± 4.9 at re‐transplantation. Pre‐transplant plasmapheresis was used in 1 (5.3%) primary transplant vs. 7 (38.9%) re‐transplants (p = .03). Nephrotic syndrome recurred in 14 patients (70%) after re‐transplantation and was severe in 21.1% vs. 64.7% after first transplant (p = .04). Graft survival was significantly higher in the second transplant (p .009) with 70% having functioning grafts at a median of 25.2 months. Thirty‐one physicians from 21 centers completed the survey, 94% indicated they would re‐transplant such patients, 44.4% preferred a minimum waiting period before re‐transplantation, 36.4% preferred living donors, and 22.2% indicated having protocols for re‐transplantation at their centers.
Conclusions
Consideration for re‐transplantation is high among pediatric nephrologists. Pre‐transplant plasmapheresis was more frequent in re‐transplanted patients. Nephrotic syndrome recurrence was less severe, with better graft survival. More data and a larger population are necessary to further evaluate outcome determinants and best practices in this special population.