Nephritis is the most important chronic complication of IgA Vasculitis (IgAV)/Henoch-Schönlein purpura (IGAV/HSP) and thus the main prognostic factor of this most common childhood vasculitis. Since ...the prognosis and treatment selection depends on the mode of interpretation of biopsy material, in this manuscript we have presented several issues related to the uneven application of different histological classifications in IgAV/Henoch-Schönlein purpura nephritis (HSPN). The nephritis of IgAV/IGAV/HSP will be abbreviated as HSPN for this paper.
In clinical practice we use different histological classifications for HSPN. It is not known which of these classifications best correlates with severity of renal disease and renal outcome in IgAV/IGAV/HSP. One of the major problem with existing histological classifications is that there is no consensus on the implementation of biopsy in the treatment of HSPN. There is a histologic classification system conventionally used in HSPN, of the International Study of Kidney Disease in Children (ISKDC). On the other hand there is the new classification system suggested for IgA nephropathy, the Oxford classification. The latter has been validated only in IgA nephropathy. There are also two further histologic classifications of Haas and Koskela that have been developed. Current treatment strategies in HSPN are not standardised nor predominantly based on histological classification.
One of the possible solutions to problems related to the application of different histological classification in HSPN is the implementation of multicenter multinational prospective studies with joint collaboration between pediatric rheumatologists, nephrologists and nephropathologists to correlate the clinical features and outcome with the classification systems as well among the classifications. This classification should be the basis for the construction of guidelines for the treatment of patients with HSPN.
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is characterized by synovial inflammation, followed by hyperplastic changes of the synovium, and destruction of articular cartilage along with underlying bone. ...This hyperplastic process is the result of inflammation-induced activation of NF-κB, which may be accompanied by decreased osteogenic differentiation of synovial mesenchymal progenitors and contribute to bone resorption. We aimed to explore osteoblast differentiation of synovial fluid (SF)-derived mesenchymal progenitors and correlate it with intensity of inflammation in patients with JIA.
Peripheral blood from 18 patients with oligoarticular (o)JIA, 22 patients with polyarticular (p)JIA and 18 controls was collected along with SF from 18 patients with oJIA and 9 patients with pJIA. SF-derived cells were cultured to assess osteoblastogenesis, using alkaline phosphatase histochemical staining and colorimetric activity assay. The expression of osteoblast-related genes, Runt-related transcription factor 2 (Runx2), Osteoprotegerin (OPG), Receptor activator of nuclear factor κB ligand (RANKL) and arthritis-related cytokine/chemokine genes, Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α, Fas, Fas ligand (FasL), Interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-4, IL-6, IL-17, IL-18, CC chemokine ligand (CCL)-2, CCL3, CCL4 was evaluated. Osteoblastogenesis was correlated with systemic and local inflammatory indicators. Expression of osteoblast genes was also analyzed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and total SF-derived cells from patients with JIA. Additionally, we assessed the inhibitory effect of SF from patients with JIA on differentiation of human bone marrow (hBM)-derived osteoblasts.
Osteoblastogenesis from SF-derived progenitors was decreased in patients with pJIA compared to those with oJIA. Osteoblastogenesis from primary SF-derived cells negatively correlated with erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ρ = -0.391, P = 0.05), C-reactive protein concentration (ρ = -0.527, P<0.01) and synovial concentration of IL-17 (ρ = -0.552, P = 0.01). SF-derived osteoblasts from pJIA patients expressed more CCL2 and CCL3 genes than in oJIA (P = 0.04 and P = 0.03, respectively; Mann-Whitney test). Expression of Fas was significantly higher in osteoblasts from patients with pJIA than those with oJIA (P = 0.03, Mann-Whitney test). SF-derived cells from patients with pJIA expressed higher levels of RANKL than in oJIA (P = 0.05, Mann-Whitney test). PBMCs from patients with JIA expressed less OPG than healthy control patients (P = 0.05, Kruskal-Wallis test). SF from all tested JIA patients inhibited differentiation of hBM-derived osteoblasts (P = 0.04, Kruskal-Wallis test).
Osteoblast differentiation was decreased in patients with severe forms of JIA and accompanied by altered cytokine/chemokine expression pattern. Development of therapeutic interventions targeting synovial mesenchymal or osteoblast lineage cells in JIA would contribute to alleviating both bone destruction and inflammation in severe forms of the disease.
Childhood-onset systemic lupus erythematosus (cSLE) presents with diverse clinical features and often with non-classical symptoms that may delay diagnosis and increase risk of morbidity and ...mortality. This paper aims to analyse incidence, and clinical and laboratory features of cSLE in Croatia between 1991 and 2010, and to identify factors influencing time to diagnosis.
Medical records at three university-based tertiary care centres were analysed retrospectively for 81 children with cSLE (68 girls). Mean age at onset was 13.4±2.8 yr (interquartile range 3), and annual incidence varied from 1-15 per million at risk. The most frequent clinical and laboratory features were musculoskeletal symptoms (80%) and increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (96%). The most frequent immunological laboratory findings were the presence of antibodies against histones (86%), double-stranded DNA (73%), and Sm protein (64%), as well as low levels of C3 complement (69%). Haematuria was present in 58% of children, proteinuria in 56%, and biopsy-confirmed lupus nephritis in 43%. Median time from symptom onset to diagnosis was 2 months (range 0-96). Time to diagnosis was inversely associated with ECLAM score (p<0.001), but it showed no association with age, gender, clinical features or distance from the nearest paediatric centre.
This is the first large-scale, in-depth study of clinical and laboratory features of cSLE in Croatia. Among all demographic, laboratory and clinical features examined, ECLAM score alone was inversely associated with time to diagnosis. This highlights the need to improve detection of children with fewer symptoms early in the course of the disease, therefore serious consequences for prognosis could be avoided.
What are the challenges ahead and how have we responded so far when it comes to the non-granulomatous systemic vasculitis, characterized mainly by deposits of IgA immune complexes in the endothelium ...of small blood vessels-IgA vasculitis (IgAV)? That is the question to which we tried to answer. We summarized existing knowledge about epidemiology, pathogenesis, genetics, diagnostic tests and therapy in this somewhat neglected entity in pediatric rheumatology. Since etiopathogenesis of IgA vasculitis is complex, with factors other than galactose-deficient IgA
-containing immune complexes also being important, and may involve numerous interactions between environmental and genetic factors, genomics alone cannot explain the entirety of the risk for the disease. The incidence of IgAV and nephritis varies worldwide and may be a consequence of overlapping genetic and environmental factors. In addition to the role of the HLA class II genes, some studies have pointed to the importance of non-HLA genes, and modern geostatistical research has also indicated a geospatial risk distribution, which may suggest the strong influence of different environmental factors such as climate, pathogen load, and dietary factors. The application of modern geostatistical methods until recently was completely unknown in the study of this disease, but thanks to the latest results it has been shown that they can help us a lot in understanding epidemiology and serve as a guide in generating new hypotheses considering possible environmental risk factors and identification of potential genetic or epigenetic diversity. There is increasing evidence that an integrative approach should be included in the understanding of IgA vasculitis, in terms of the integration of genomics, proteomics, transcriptomics, and epigenetics. This approach could result in the discovery of new pathways important for finding biomarkers that could stratify patients according to the risk of complications, without an invasive kidney biopsy which is still the gold standard to confirm a diagnosis of nephritis, even if biopsy findings interpretation is not uniform in clinical practice. Ultimately, this will allow the development of new therapeutic approaches, especially important in the treatment of nephritis, for which there is still no standardized treatment.
This article presents a case of a 17-year-old girl with primary antiphospholipid syndrome developing subacute signs of hand and leg ischaemia caused by radiologically verified radial and popliteal ...artery occlusion. She is successfully treated with a thrombolytic agent (alteplase) and recovers completely. Her laboratory results came positive for all three subtypes of antiphospholipid antibodies. This kind of antiphospholipid syndrome presentation is a very rare entity in itself. Shortly afterwards her mother is diagnosed with primary antiphospholipid syndrome as well. A familial form of antiphospholipid syndrome is suspected. Combination of a familial antiphospholipid syndrome presenting as bivessel arterial thrombosis is a unique case, to the best of our knowledge, never described in the literature before.
The pathogenesis of IgAV, the most common systemic vasculitis in childhood, appears to be complex and requires further elucidation. We aimed to investigate the potential role of galactose-deficient ...immunoglobulin A1 (Gd-IgA1), high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) and protocadherin 1 (PCDH1) in the pathogenesis of IgAV. Our prospective study enrolled 86 patients with IgAV and 70 controls. HMGB1, RAGE, Gd-IgA1 and PCDH1 in serum and urine were determined by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) method at the onset of the disease and after a six-month interval in patients and once in the control group. Serum concentrations of HMGB1, RAGE and PCDH1 and urinary concentrations of HMGB1, RAGE, Gd-IgA1 and PCDH1 were significantly higher in patients with IgAV than in the control group (
< 0.001). Concentrations of HMGB1 (5573 pg/mL vs. 3477 pg/mL vs. 1088 pg/mL,
< 0.001) and RAGE (309 pg/mL vs. 302.4 pg/mL vs. 201.3 pg/mL,
= 0.012) in the serum of patients remained significantly elevated when the disease onset was compared with the six-month follow-up interval, and thus could be a potential marker of disease activity. Urinary concentration of HMGB1 measured in the follow-up period was higher in patients with nephritis compared to IgAV without nephritis (270.9 (146.7-542.7) ng/mmol vs. 133.2 (85.9-318.6) ng/mmol,
= 0.049) and significantly positively correlated with the urine albumine to creatinine ratio (τ = 0.184,
< 0.05), the number of erythrocytes in urine samples (τ = 0.193,
< 0.05) and with the outcome of nephritis (τ = 0.287,
< 0.05); therefore, HMGB1 could be a potential tool for monitoring patients with IgAV who develop nephritis. Taken together, our results imply a possible interplay of Gd-IgA1, HMGB1, RAGE and PCDH1 in the development of IgAV. The identification of sensitive biomarkers in IgAV may provide disease prevention and future therapeutics.
IgA vasculitis (IgAV) is the most common childhood vasculitis. The main cause of morbidity and mortality in children with IgAV is nephritis (IgAVN), but the risk of its development, severity, and ...chronicity remain unclear. Erythrocyte glutathione S-transferase (e-GST) activity has been previously detected as a sensitive marker of kidney function impairment in several diseases. We spectrophotometrically assessed and correlated e-GST activity between 55 IgAV patients without nephritis (IgAVwN), 42 IgAVN patients, and 52 healthy controls. At disease onset, e-GST activity was significantly higher in IgAVN patients (median (interquartile range)) (5.7 U/gHb (4.4-7.5)) than in IgAVwN patients (3.1 U/gHb (2.2-4.2);
< 0.001), and controls (3.1 U/gHb (1.9-4.2);
< 0.001). Therewithal, there were no differences between the IgAVwN patients and controls (
= 0.837). e-GST activity was also significantly higher in the IgAVN patients than in the IgAVwN patients after 3 months (5.0 U/gHb (4.2-6.2) vs. 3.3 U/gHb (2.3-4.1);
< 0.001) and 6 months (4.2 U/gHb (3.2-5.8) vs. 3.3 U/gHb (2.1-4.1);
< 0.001) since the disease onset. Consistent correlations between e-GST activity and serum creatinine, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), and proteinuria levels were not detected. In conclusion, increased e-GST activity can serve as a subtle indicator of kidney function impairment in children with IgAV.
Juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus (JSLE) is a systemic autoimmune chronic disease that can affect any part of the body. It is characterized by the formation of antibodies against nuclear ...antigens. Vasculitis may be found in SLE, but it scarcely complies with anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV) criteria. We report five cases of severe JSLE associated with AAV diagnosed between 1991 and 2013 in three university-based tertiary care centers. The patients (3 girls and 2 boys, aged 12 to 17) presented with a severe clinical picture and the following features: cytopenia (n=5), autoimmune hepatitis (n=3), lupus nephritis (n=1), pancreatitis (n=1), secondary antiphospholipid syndrome (n=2), impending respiratory failure (n=2), and gastrointestinal bleeding (n=1). All patients were proteinase 3 (PR3) ANCA positive, while two of them were myeloperoxidase (MPO) and PR3 ANCAs positive at the same time. They were treated with corticosteroids and immunosuppressive drugs. Remission of the disease was achieved in three patients. The course of the disease was worsening in two patients and we included rituximab (anti-CD20) in therapy. All of our patients presented as the most severe SLE patients, who must be diagnosed as soon as possible and treated very intensively. Since the comorbidity of JSLE and AAV occurs very rarely in children, presentation of such patients, their clinical pictures, treatment, and the course of the diseases are experiences that can be of great help.
We investigated the polarisation of CD68+ macrophages and perforin and granulysin distributions in kidney lymphocyte subsets of children with IgA vasculitis nephritis (IgAVN). Pro-inflammatory ...macrophage (M)1 (CD68/iNOS) or regulatory M2 (CD68/arginase-1) polarisation; spatial arrangement of macrophages and lymphocytes; and perforin and granulysin distribution in CD3+ and CD56+ cells were visulaised using double-labelled immunofluorescence. In contrast to the tubules, iNOS+ cells were more abundant than the arginase-1+ cells in the glomeruli. CD68+ macrophage numbers fluctuated in the glomeruli and were mostly labelled with iNOS. CD68+/arginase-1+ cells are abundant in the tubules. CD56+ cells, enclosed by CD68+ cells, were more abundant in the glomeruli than in the tubuli, and co-expressed NKp44. The glomerular and interstitial/intratubular CD56+ cells express perforin and granulysin, respectively. The CD3+ cells did not express perforin, while a minority expressed granulysin. Innate immunity, represented by M1 macrophages and CD56+ cells rich in perforin and granulysin, plays a pivotal role in the acute phase of IgAVN.