Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation (Jan 2014)

Fifteen years of kidney biopsies in children: A single center in Egypt

  • Ashraf Bakr,
  • Riham Eid,
  • Amr Sarhan,
  • Ayman Hammad,
  • Ahmed Mahmoud El-Refaey,
  • Atef El-Mougy,
  • Mohammed Magdy Zedan,
  • Fatma ElHusseini,
  • Ashraf Abd El-Rahman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/1319-2442.144307
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 6
pp. 1321 – 1327

Abstract

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This study retrospectively investigates the indications and results of renal biopsy in children to determine the patterns of childhood kidney disease in a single tertiary children′s hospital in Egypt. We included all the patients who underwent ultrasound-guided renal biopsy from 1998 to 2012. All the kidney biopsies were studied under light microscopy, while immunofluorescence and electron microscopy were performed when indicated. A total of 1246 renal biopsies were performed over 15 years, on 1096 patients. The mean age of the patients at the time of biopsy was 9.2 ± 3.7 years. The main indication for a biopsy was the steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (n = 354, 28.4%), followed by the atypical nephrotic syndrome (n = 250, 20.1%), and renal abnormalities in the systemic diseases (n = 228, 18.3 %). In the 1226 pathologically diagnosed specimens, primary glomerulonephritis was the most common finding (n = 826, 67.4%), followed by secondary glomerulonephritis (n = 238, 19.4%). The most common causes of primary glomerulonephritis were Minimal Change Disease (MCD) (n = 267, 21.8%), diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis (n = 188, 15. 3%), and focal proliferative glomerulonephritis (n = 164, 13.3%). Lupus nephritis (n = 209, 17%) was the most common cause of secondary glomerulonephritis. We conclude that the steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome was the most frequent indication for biopsy and minimal change disease was the most common histopathological finding in our population.