Kidney International Reports (May 2019)

Glomerular C4d Staining Does Not Exclude a C3 Glomerulopathy

  • Geetika Singh,
  • Shamresh Kumar Singh,
  • Aasma Nalwa,
  • Lavleen Singh,
  • Immanuel Pradeep,
  • Adarsh Barwad,
  • Aditi Sinha,
  • Pankaj Hari,
  • Arvind Bagga,
  • Soumita Bagchi,
  • Sanjay Kumar Agarwal,
  • Amit Kumar Dinda

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 5
pp. 698 – 709

Abstract

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Introduction: C4d, an early product in the classical/lectin complement pathway has shown potential in the evaluation of C3 glomerulopathy where its absence would support an alternative pathway abnormality. As autoimmune/genetic complement testing is not readily available to most parts of the world, glomerular C4d staining may serve as a useful additional step toward the diagnosis. Methods: To test this hypothesis, C4d staining was performed on a large cohort of C3 glomerulopathy. Archival cases from 2011 to 2017 were reviewed and immunohistochemistry for C4d was performed, scored (scale of 0 to 3+), and correlated with the immunofluorescence and ultrastructural findings. Paraffin immunofluorescence was performed in cases of “discordant C4d” to unmask Igs. Results: Twenty-seven cases of dense deposit disease (DDD) and 14 cases of C3 glomerulonephritis (C3GN) were retrieved. C4d demonstrated a range of staining intensities with negative/traces in only 22% of DDD and 64% of C3GN. Lower-intensity C4d staining (1 to 2+) was mostly concordant with similar amounts of Igs/C1q. Discordant 3+ staining was noted in approximately 50% of cases of DDD and 20% of cases of C3GN. Among them, paraffin immunofluorescence unmasked polyclonal Igs in 2 of 5 cases of DDD and 1 of 3 cases of C3GN. Conclusion: This observational study suggests that the presence of glomerular C4d should not exclude a C3 glomerulopathy. In lower intensities, it appears to represent overlying classical/lectin pathway activation with concordant Ig/C1q deposits. A subset of cases, however, displays intense and discordant C4d staining, which raises the possibility of an associated lectin pathway abnormality, a potential future area of study. Keywords: C3 glomerulonephritis, C3 glomerulopathy, C4d, dense deposit disease, lectin pathway