Association of genetic polymorphisms of angiopoietin-like 4 with severity of posttransplant proteinuria in kidney allograft recipients.
2017
Abstract Background Proteinuria is a hallmark of glomerular injury, and persistent proteinuria is associated with graft failure in kidney transplant patients. Recently, it is known that the level of circulating angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) is elevated in the patients with human nephrotic syndrome, in which ANGPTL4 is responsible for relieving proteinuria. Purpose The purpose of this study is to determine effects of clinical factors and genetic polymorphism of ANGPTL4 on proteinuria after kidney transplantation. Methods A total of 282 patients out of 400 renal transplant patients between 2008 and 2012 at St. Vincent Medical Center, CA were studied in a retrospective study design. The level of proteinuria was measured by random urine protein to creatinine ratio, and divided into two groups (Group 1: UPC Results Among various clinical factors, only delayed graft function, mTOR inhibitor use and fish oil use were significantly associated with posttransplant proteinuria. Statistical differences were found in genetic polymorphisms of ANGPTL4 (rs1044250, rs2278236) in regards to proteinuria among tested patients. rs1044250 (C/T, T228M, missense mutation) alleles showed multiple significant differences (Group 1 vs. Group 2: C vs. T: OR = 1.893, CI = 1.322–2.710, p Conclusions This study suggests that the presence of C allele of rs1044250 and G allele of rs2278236 in ANGPTL4 gene is associated with higher risk of moderate/severe proteinuria in renal transplant patients.
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