Anti-HLA antibodies and especially donor-specific antibodies (DSA) play a significant role in graft survival after solid organ transplantation. Their impact on long-term survival in adult liver ...transplantation (LT) is controversial, but they may be a risk factor. The effects of DSA after pediatric LT are still unclear.
We performed a retrospective evaluation of DSA in sera from 43 children who had received transplants at our tertiary center. Twenty-four patients had good long-term clinical and laboratory graft function (group 1), whereas 19 LT recipients suffered from histologically confirmed and clinically relevant chronic allograft rejection (group 2); 16 of these have already undergone retransplantation due to graft dysfunction. Inclusion criteria were availability of sera before the first LT to identify preformed antibodies in case of DSA positivity after LT and long-term follow-up at our institution. Sera were analyzed for anti-HLA antibodies using Luminex single antigen beads, where a mean fluorescence intensity value of more than 1500 was considered positive.
The prevalence of DSA was 33% for group 1 and 68% for group 2. Antibodies were predominantly HLA class II. Values of mean fluorescence intensity were comparable in both groups. Only one of the DSA+ ve patients from group 1 exhibited preformed antibodies. In conclusion, pediatric patients with chronic rejection revealed a higher rate of de novo DSA, especially of HLA-class II DSA. Further studies are necessary to confirm these data with a larger pediatric cohort.
Background
Long-term outcomes of children with nephrotic syndrome have not been well described in the literature.
Methods
Cross-sectional study data analysis of
n
= 43 patients with ...steroid-sensitive (SSNS) and
n
= 7 patients with steroid-resistant (SRNS) nephrotic syndrome were retrospectively collected; patients were clinically examined at a follow-up visit (FUV), on average 30 years after onset, there was the longest follow-up period to date.
Results
The mean age at FUV was 33.6 years (14.4–50.8 years,
n
= 41). The mean age of patients with SSNS at onset was 4.7 years (median 3.8 years (1.2–14.5 years), the mean number of relapses was 5.8 (0 to 29 relapses). Seven patients (16.3%) had no relapses. Eleven patients were “frequent relapsers” (25.6%) and four patients still had relapses beyond the age of 18 years. Except of cataracts and arterial hypertension, there were no negative long-term outcomes and only one patient was using immunosuppressant therapy at FUV. 55% of patients suffered from allergies and 47.5% had hypercholesterolemia. Two patients suffered a heart attack in adulthood. A younger age at onset (< 4 years) was a risk factor for frequent relapses. An early relapse (within 6 months after onset) was a risk factor and a low birth weight was not a significant risk factor for a complicated NS course. The mean age of patients with SRNS at onset was 4.6 ± 4.4 years and 27.5 ± 9.9 years at FUV. Three patients received kidney transplantations.
Conclusions
The positive long-term prognosis of SSNS can reduce the concern of parents about the probability of the child developing a chronic renal disease during the clinical course after onset.
Objectives: This study aimed to analyse the clinical course of 45 children with severe alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) registered in our clinic to detect possible predictors of poor outcomes. ...Methods: The clinical and biological data of 45 patients with homozygous or compound heterozygous AATD were analysed. The data were collected retrospectively going back to 2005 and prospectively from May 2020 until October 2021. It was based on questionnaires, laboratory values, sonography, and biopsy findings. Liver disease was classified into four grades depending on the grade of liver disease: mild or no liver disease, moderate disease, severe disease, and liver transplantation. Results: Thirty-nine patients (86.7%) had a Pi*ZZ and five (11.1%) a Pi*SZ genotype. One patient showed a new, not-yet-described compound heterozygous genotype (Pi*Z + Asp95Asn). A total of 66.7% of the cohort showed mild or no liver disease, 20% moderate, and 13.3% severe. AATD was diagnosed in most cases because of liver abnormalities, such as the elevation of transaminases (42.2%). A total of 29.4% of the patients with neonatal icterus prolongatus developed severe liver disease, and 25.7% were born small for their gestational age (SGA). Diseases of the atopic type were reported in 47.4% of the cases. Conclusions: The presence of neonatal icterus prolongatus in the first weeks of life was significantly more likely in severe courses of liver disease (r = 0.371, p = 0.012). A tendency toward atopic comorbidity in AAT-deficient children needs to be further evaluated.
We report a 15-year-old boy who developed aseptic meningitis 10 days after administration of the second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine BNT162b2. Although accompanying aphthous mouth ulcers resembling ...herpetic stomatitis initially led us to suspect an underlying viral infection, broad virological and microbiological screening did not identify any causative pathogen. Gonarthritis and skin lesions, which both developed within three days after admission, extended the clinical presentation eventually resembling an acute Behçet's disease episode. This is the first description of a juvenile patient with aseptic and pathogen-negative meningitis occurring in close temporal association with vaccination against COVID-19, along with a few previously reported adult patients with isolated meningitis and a further case with meningitis and an accompanying Behçet's disease-like multisystem inflammation episode as seen in our patient. With billions of individuals being vaccinated worldwide so far and only a few cases of aseptic pathogen-negative meningitis reported in close temporal relation, causality is unclear. However, aseptic meningitis should be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of patients with persistent or delayed onset of headache and fever following COVID-19 vaccination.
Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 2 (PFIC‐2) is caused by mutations in ABCB11, encoding the bile salt export pump (BSEP). In 2009, we described a child with PFIC‐2 who developed ...PFIC‐like symptoms after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). BSEP‐reactive antibodies were demonstrated to account for disease recurrence. Here, we characterize the nature of this antibody response in 7 more patients with antibody‐induced BSEP deficiency (AIBD). Gene sequencing and immunostaining of native liver biopsies indicated absent or strongly reduced BSEP expression in all 7 PFIC‐2 patients who suffered from phenotypic disease recurrence post‐OLT. Immunofluorescence, western blotting analysis, and transepithelial transport assays demonstrated immunoglobulin (Ig) G‐class BSEP‐reactive antibodies in these patients. In all cases, the N‐terminal half of BSEP was recognized, with reaction against its first extracellular loop (ECL1) in six sera. In five, antibodies reactive against the C‐terminal half also were found. Only the sera recognizing ECL1 showed inhibition of transepithelial taurocholate transport. In a vesicle‐based functional assay, transport inhibition by anti‐BSEP antibodies binding from the cytosolic side was functionally proven as well. Within 2 hours of perfusion with antibodies purified from 1 patient, rat liver showed canalicular IgG staining that was absent after perfusion with control IgG. Conclusions: PFIC‐2 patients carrying severe BSEP mutations are at risk of developing BSEP antibodies post‐OLT. The antibody response is polyclonal, targeting both extra‐ and intracellular BSEP domains. ECL1, a unique domain of BSEP, likely is a critical target involved in transport inhibition as demonstrated in several patients with AIBD manifest as cholestasis. (Hepatology 2016;63:524–537)
Background. Nonurgent visits in pediatric Emergency Departments are a growing burden. In order to find predictors for those nonurgent visits, we performed a retrospective analysis of unscheduled ...visits at the Pediatric Emergency Department of the University Hospital of Bonn, Germany, in the year 2017. Additionally, we compared these findings to unscheduled visits during the first peak of the worldwide pandemic of the Coronavirus disease 2019, to see if there would be an effect on nonurgent pediatric Emergency Department attendances. Methods. For our retrospective cohort study, we analyzed more than 5.000 visits at the pediatric Emergency Department of the University Hospital of Bonn, Germany, before and during the first peak of the ongoing worldwide pandemic of the Coronavirus disease 2019, particularly with regard to their urgency. Data included gender, age, zip code, urgency, and preexisting conditions. Results. Our study shows that more than half of unscheduled pediatric Emergency Department visits (69%) at the University Hospital in Bonn are for nonurgent reasons, with short living distance being a factor to present children to a pediatric Emergency Department, even with minor complaints. During the first peak of the pandemic of the Coronavirus disease 2019, nonurgent visits decreased significantly, potentially due to hesitation to attend a pediatric Emergency Department with minor issues, fearing an infection with SARS-CoV-2 at the hospital. Conclusion. Many people use pediatric Emergency Departments for nonemergency complaints. In order to address the reasons for nonurgent visits to pediatric Emergency Departments and to prevent parents from doing so, further studies and targeted education concepts for parents are needed.
Background
The incidence of childhood nephrotic syndrome (NS) in Germany is not well known.
Methods
An ESPED-based nationwide collection of epidemiological data of children in 2005 and 2006.
Result
...The mean age of NS at onset was 5.5 ± 3.7 years. The gender ratio of boys to girls was 1.8:1. The average length of stay was 15.5 ± 11.2 days, with younger children remaining significantly longer in hospital. Steroid-resistance was more common in children ≥8 years (
p
= 0.023). Focal-segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) was more common in children >10 years (
p
= 0.029). The ratio of males to females with FSGS was 1:1.9, thus the FSGS risk for girls at onset was 3.3-times greater. Considering the available data, the incidence of NS in Germany is 1.2/100,000 in the population <18 years, of which 1.0/100,000 are steroid-sensitive.
Conclusion
Compared with international data, which primarily focused on regional and small populations, this is the largest study about the incidence of the childhood NS.
Neonatal diabetes with congenital hypothyroidism (NDH) syndrome is a rare condition caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in the GLI-similar 3 coding gene
. Almost 20 patients have ...been reported to date, with significant phenotypic variability.
We describe a boy with a homozygous deletion (exons 5-9) in the
gene, who presents novel clinical aspects not reported previously. In addition to neonatal diabetes, congenital hypothyroidism and other known multi-organ manifestations such as cholestasis and renal cysts, he suffered from hyporegenerative anemia during the first four months of life and presents megalocornea in the absence of elevated intraocular pressure. Compensation of partial exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and deficiencies in antioxidative vitamins seemed to have exerted marked beneficial impact on several disease symptoms including cholestasis and TSH resistance, although a causal relation is difficult to prove. Considering reports on persistent fetal hemoglobin detected in a few children with
mutations, the transient anemia seen in our patient may represent a further symptom associated with either the
defect itself or, secondarily, micronutrient deficiency related to exocrine pancreatic deficiency or cholestasis.
Our report expands the phenotypic spectrum of patients with
mutations and adds important information on the clinical course, highlighting the possible beneficial effects of pancreatic enzyme and antioxidative vitamin substitutions on characteristic NDH syndrome manifestations such as TSH resistance and cholestasis. We recommend to carefully screen infants with
mutations for subtle biochemical signs of partial exocrine pancreatic deficiency or to discuss exploratory administration of pancreatic enzymes and antioxidative vitamins, even in case of good weight gain and fecal elastase concentrations in the low-to-normal range.
Biomechanics are gaining ground in gastroenterology in the creation of educational models and to describe the necessary forces to perforate hallow organs during endoscopy. We thus investigated the ...breaking forces of porcine intestinal segments and whether they could be predicted based on body weight or crown–rump length. Based on a priori power-analyses, 10 pigs were included. The breaking forces were determined with a motorized test stand. We found that the breaking forces of intestinal segments were different (H(6) = 33.7, p < 0.0001): Ileal breaking force (x¯ = 24.14 N) was higher than jejunal (x¯ = 14.24 N, p = 0.0082) and colonic (x¯ = 11.33 N, p < 0.0001) breaking force. The latter was also smaller than cecal breaking force (x¯ = 24.6 N, p = 0.0044). Likewise, rectal (x¯ = 23.57 N) breaking force was higher than jejunal (p = 0.0455) and colonic (p = 0.0006) breaking force. Breaking forces were not correlated to body weight or crown–rump length (R < 0.49, p > 0.148). Intestinal segments differ in their breaking forces. The colon had the least resistance to traction forces. It remains to be determined if similar relationships exist in humans in order to validate porcine models for endoscopy and surgery.
Nephrotic syndrome (NS) is one of the most frequent occurring chronic kidney diseases in childhood, despite its rarely occurrence in the general population. Detailed information about clinical data ...of NS (e.g. average length of stay, complications) as well as of secondary nephrotic syndrome (SNS) is not well known.
A nationwide ESPED follow-up study presenting the clinical course and management of children with NS in Germany.
In course of 2 years, 347 children developed the first onset of NS, hereof 326 patients (93.9%) had a primary NS, and 19 patients had a SNS (missing data in 2 cases), the majority due to a Henoch-Schönlein Purpura. Patients with steroid-resistant NS (SRNS) stayed significantly longer in hospital than children with steroid-sensitive NS (25.2 vs. 13.3 d, p < 0.001). Patients with bacterial/viral infections stayed longer in hospital (24.9 d/19.5d) than children without an infection (14.2 d/14.9 d; p < 0.001; p = 0.016). Additionally, children with urinary tract infections (UTI) (p < 0,001), arterial hypertension (AH) (p < 0.001) and acute renal failure (ARF) (p < 0,001) stayed significantly longer in hospital. Patients with SRNS had frequent complications (p = 0.004), such as bacterial infections (p = 0.013), AH (p < 0.001), UTI (p < 0.001) and ARF (p = 0.007). Children with a focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) had significantly more complications (p = 0.04); specifically bacterial infections (p = 0.01), UTI (p = 0.003) and AH (p < 0,001). Steroid-resistance was more common in patients with UTI (p < 0.001) and in patients with ARF (p = 0.007). Furthermore, steroid-resistance (p < 0.001) and FSGS (p < 0.001) were more common in patients with AH.
This nationwide, largest German study presents results on the clinical course of children with NS considering a diverse range of complications that can occur with NS. The establishment of a region-wide and international pediatric NS register would be useful to conduct further diagnostic and therapy studies with the aim to reduce the complication rate and to improve the prognosis of NS, and to compare the data with international cohorts.