Controversy surrounds the relatedness of fibrillary glomerulonephritis (FGN) and immunotactoid
glomerulonephritis (IT).
To better define their clinicopathologic features and outcome, we report the largest
single center series of 67 cases biopsied from 1980 to 2001, including 61 FGN and
6 IT. FGN was defined by glomerular immune deposition of Congo red-negative randomly
oriented fibrils of < 30 nm (mean, 20.1 +/- 0.4 nm). IT was defined by glomerular
deposition of hollow, stacked microtubules of > or = 30 nm (mean, 38.2 +/- 5.7 nm).
FGN comprised 0.6% of total native kidney biopsies and IT was tenfold more rare (0.06%).
Deposits in FGN were immunoglobulin G (IgG) dominant and polyclonal in 96%. IgG subtype
analysis in 19 FGN cases showed monotypic deposits in four (two IgG1 and two IgG4)
and oligotypic deposits in 15 (all combined IgG1 and IgG4). In IT, deposits were IgG
dominant in 83% and monoclonal in 67% (three IgG1 kappa and one IgG1 lambda). FGN
patients were a mean age of 57 years, 92% were Caucasian, and 39% were male. At biopsy,
FGN patients had the following clinical characteristics (mean, range): creatinine
3.1 mg/dL (0.5 to 14), proteinuria 6.5 g/day (0.8 to 25), 60% microhematuria, and
59% hypertension. Histologic patterns of FGN were diverse, including diffuse proliferative
glomerulonephritis (DPGN) (nine cases), membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN)
(27 cases), mesangial proliferative/sclerosing (MES) (13), membranous glomerulonephritis
(MGN) (four), and diffuse sclerosing (DS) (eight). The more proliferative (MPGN and
DPGN) and sclerosing (DS) forms presented with a higher creatinine and greater proteinuria
compared to MES and MGN. Median time to end-stage renal disease (ESRD) was 24.4 months
for FGN and mean time to ESRD varied by histologic subtype: DS 7 months, DPGN 20 months,
MPGN 44 months, compared to MES 80 months and MGN 87 months. There was no statistically
significant effect of immunosuppressive therapy (given to 36% of FGN patients). By
Cox regression (hazard ratio, confidence interval, P value), independent predictors
of progression to ESRD were creatinine at biopsy [2.05 (1.55 to 2.72) P < 0.001] and
severity of interstitial fibrosis [2.01 (1.05 to 3.85) P = 0.034]. Although IT had
similar presentation, histologic patterns, and outcome compared to FGN, it had a greater
association with monoclonal gammopathy (P = 0.014), underlying lymphoproliferative
disease (P = 0.020), and hypocomplementemia (P = 0.032).
FGN is an idiopathic condition characterized by polyclonal immune deposits with restricted
gamma isotypes. Most patients present with significant renal insufficiency and have
a poor outcome despite immunosuppressive therapy, and outcome correlates with histologic
subtype. By contrast, IT often contains monoclonal IgG deposits and has a significant
association with underlying dysproteinemia and hypocomplementemia. Differentiation
of FGN from the much more rare entity IT appears justified on immunopathologic, ultrastructural,
and clinical grounds.