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      Call for Papers: Green Renal Replacement Therapy: Caring for the Environment

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      Cyclophosphamide pulse therapy in advanced progressive IgA nephropathy.

      Nephron. Clinical practice
      S. Karger AG

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          Abstract

          For advanced progressive primary IgA nephropathy (IgAN) no established therapy exists. We conducted a prospective, uncontrolled trial to evaluate the effect of intravenous cyclophosphamide pulse (CyP) therapy on the course of advanced progressive IgAN. Twenty-one patients (mean age 52 +/- 10 years; male/female 20/1) with biopsy-proven IgAN without crescentic extracapillary proliferation and a serum creatinine of more than 2.0 mg/dl and/or an increase more than 25% in the previous 3 months were included. Patients were treated with CyP (750 mg/m(2 )body surface area) every 4 weeks for 6 months and low dose oral prednisolone. The loss of renal function per year was significantly reduced from 16% before therapy to 4% after therapy (p < 0.001). A further increase >25% of serum creatinine after therapy was observed in 8 patients after 0.7 years (range 0.3-3.0 years), and 3 of these patients developed end-stage renal disease. Proteinuria decreased significantly during CyP therapy. A low nadir of white blood cell and platelet count was associated with a better renal outcome (p = 0.025). In conclusion, CyP therapy and low dose oral prednisolone is effective in preserving renal function in a subgroup of patients with advanced progressive IgAN.

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          Renoprotective properties of ACE-inhibition in non-diabetic nephropathies with non-nephrotic proteinuria.

          Stratum 2 of the Ramipril Efficacy in Nephropathy (REIN) study has already shown that in patients with chronic nephropathies and proteinuria of 3 g or more per 24 h, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition reduced the rate of decline in glomerular filtration and halved the combined risk of doubling of serum creatinine or end-stage renal failure (ESRF) found in controls on placebo plus conventional antihypertensives. In REIN stratum 1, reported here, 24 h proteinuria was 1 g or more but less than 3 g per 24 h. In stratum 1 of this double-blind trial 186 patients were randomised to a ramipril or a control (placebo plus conventional antihypertensive therapy) group targeted at achieving a diastolic blood pressure of less than 90 mm Hg. The primary endpoints were change in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and time to ESRF or overt proteinuria (> or =53 g/24 h). Median follow-up was 31 months. The decline in GFR per month was not significantly different (ramipril 0.26 [SE 0.05] mL per min per 1.73m2, control 0.29 [0.06]). Progression to ESRF was significantly less common in the ramipril group (9/99 vs 18/87) for a relative risk (RR) of 2.72 (95% CI 1.22-6.08); so was progression to overt proteinuria (15/99 vs 27/87, RR 2.40 [1.27-4.52]). Patients with a baseline GFR of 45 mL/min/1.73 m2 or less and proteinuria of 1.5 g/24 h or more had more rapid progression and gained the most from ramipril treatment. Proteinuria decreased by 13% in the ramipril group and increased by 15% in the controls. Cardiovascular events were similar. As expected, the rate of decline in GFR and the frequency of ESRF were much lower in stratum 1 than they had been in stratum 2. In non-diabetic nephropathies, ACE inhibition confers renoprotection even to patients with non-nephrotic proteinuria.
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            Corticosteroids in IgA nephropathy: a randomised controlled trial

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              Controlled trial of pulse methylprednisolone versus two regimens of pulse cyclophosphamide in severe lupus nephritis

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                12759581
                10.1159/000070232

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