Urinary C5b-9 excretion and clinical course in idiopathic human membranous nephropathy

1995 
Urinary C5b-9 excretion and clinical course in idiopathic human membranous nephropathy. Recent reports suggested that the presence of terminal complement complex (C5b-9) in urine from patients with idiopathic membranous nephropathy (IMN) may indicate on-going immunological damage. This report documents the relationship between C5b-9 excretion and clinical outcome in 35 adult patients with biopsy-proven IMN and progressively declining renal function. There were two groups of patients. Group I received one of three treatment regimens: prednisolone alone, prednisolone and chlorambucil, or prednisolone and cyclophosphamide (N = 22). Group II received no immunosuppressive therapy (N = 17). Three of the 18 patients receiving immunosuppressive drugs had more than one treatment regimen as they experienced a clinical relapse during the study period; hence 22 treatments were available for analysis. Urine samples were collected regularly and urinary C5b-9 (uC5b-9) was determined by ELISA. Both groups were similar with respect to age, sex distribution, and the duration of follow-up. An improvement in proteinuria and creatinine clearance was noted in the immunosuppressed group. Thirty-five patients were excreting C5b-9 initially (18 from group I and 17 from group II); 17 patients continued to excrete C5b-9 at the end of the observation period. These 17 patients had a significantly worse clinical outcome when compared to the 18 patients whose C5b-9 excretion became negative, either spontaneously or with treatment (P
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