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Renal Survival in Children with Glomerulonephritis with Crescents: A Pediatric Nephrology Research Consortium Cohort Study.

Joseph G MaliakkalM John HicksMini MichaelDavid T SelewskiKatherine TwombleyMichelle N RheaultMeredith SeamonJason M MisuracCheryl L TranLoretta Z ReyesJoseph T FlynnAli M OnderAlexandru R ConstantinescuVaishali SinghCynthia PanAbiodun OmolojaQiang WuWilliam E SmoyerGuillermo HidalgoScott E Wenderfer
Published in: Journal of clinical medicine (2020)
There is no evidence-based definition for diagnosing crescentic glomerulonephritis. The prognostic implications of crescentic lesions on kidney biopsy have not been quantified. Our objective was to determine risk factors for end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) in patients with glomerulonephritis and crescents on kidney biopsy. A query of the Pediatric Nephrology Research Consortium's Pediatric Glomerulonephritis with Crescents registry identified 305 patients from 15 centers. A retrospective cohort study was performed with ESKD as the primary outcome. Median age at biopsy was 11 years (range 1-21). The percentage of crescents was 3-100% (median 20%). Etiologies included IgA nephropathy (23%), lupus (21%), IgA vasculitis (19%) and ANCA-associated GN (13%), post-infectious GN (5%), and anti-glomerular basement membrane disease (3%). The prevalence of ESKD was 12% at one year and 16% at last follow-up (median = 3 years, range 1-11). Median time to ESKD was 100 days. Risk factors for ESKD included %crescents, presence of fibrous crescents, estimated GFR, and hypertension at biopsy. For each 1% increase in %crescents, there was a 3% decrease in log odds of 1-year renal survival (p = 0.003) and a 2% decrease in log odds of renal survival at last follow-up (p < 0.001). These findings provide an evidence base for enrollment criteria for crescentic glomerulonephritis in future clinical trials.
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