De novo posttransplant membranous nephropathy after COVID-19 vaccination 9 years after renal transplantation in a patient with polycystic kidney disease.
Miruzato FukudaTakayoshi YokoyamaKatsuyuki MikiMasayuki YamanouchiDaisuke IkumaHiroki MizunoYuki ObaNoriko InoueAkinari SekineKiho TanakaEiko HasegawaTatsuya SuwabeTakehiko WadaKei KonoKeiichi KinowakiKenichi OhashiYutaka YamaguchiYuki NakamuraYasuo IshiiNaoki SawaYoshifumi UbaraPublished in: CEN case reports (2024)
A 63-year-old man with polycystic kidney disease underwent kidney transplantation from his wife. Nine years later, after the first and second doses of the COVID-19 vaccination, he developed proteinuria, hematuria, and elevated C-reactive protein. Kidney biopsy 7 months after the initial appearance of proteinuria showed immunoglobulin (Ig)-G granular stain, predominantly IgG1, and spike formation in the glomerular basement membrane. Electron microscopy revealed mainly subepithelial deposits, which corresponds to membranous nephropathy (MN) stage 3 of the Ehrenreich-Churg classification indicating chronic disease, but it also showed electron-dense deposits and endothelial damage. Because a kidney biopsy was performed 1 h after renal transplantation and a biopsy of the patient's native kidney showed intact glomeruli, atypical de novo posttransplant membranous nephropathy (MN) was diagnosed, and a close relationship with COVID-19 vaccination was assumed. Clinicians should consider the involvement of COVID-19 vaccination in de novo posttransplant MN with unclear pathogenesis.