Kidney International Reports (Apr 2021)

Functional and Genetic Landscape of Complement Dysregulation Along the Spectrum of Thrombotic Microangiopathy and its Potential Implications on Clinical Outcomes

  • Sjoerd A.M.E.G. Timmermans,
  • Jan G.M.C. Damoiseaux,
  • Alexis Werion,
  • Chris P. Reutelingsperger,
  • Johann Morelle,
  • Pieter van Paassen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
pp. 1099 – 1109

Abstract

Read online

Introduction: The syndromes of thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) are diverse and represent severe endothelial damage caused by various mechanisms. The complement system plays a major role in a subset of patients with TMA, and its recognition is of clinical importance because it guides choice and duration of treatment. Methods: We studied a well-defined cohort of patients with TMA and hypothesized that assessment of serum-induced ex vivo C5b9 formation on the endothelium and screening for rare variants in complement genes can better categorize TMA. Results: Massive ex vivo C5b9 formation was found in all patients with primary atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (n/N = 11/11) and in 59% of patients with TMA and coexisting conditions (n/N = 30/51). Massive ex vivo C5b9 formation was associated with rare genetic variants (45% [n/N = 20/44] vs. 0% [n/N = 0/21] patients with normal ex vivo C5b9 formation; P < 0.001). Massive ex vivo C5b9 formation was associated with favorable renal response to therapeutic complement inhibition in patients with TMA and coexisting conditions (86% [n/N = 12/14] vs. 31% [n/N = 5/16] of untreated patients; P < 0.001), indicating complement-mediated TMA rather than secondary disease. Among treated patients, the odds ratio for 1-year kidney survival was 12.0 (95% confidence interval 1.2-115.4). TMA recurrence was linked to rare genetic variants in all cases. Patients with normal ex vivo C5b9 formation had an acute, nonrelapsing form of TMA. Conclusions: Ex vivo C5b9 formation and genetic testing appears to categorize TMAs into different groups because it identifies complement as a driving factor of disease, with potential therapeutic and prognostic implications.

Keywords