Journal of Clinical Medicine (Sep 2021)

Renal Outcome of IgM Nephropathy: A Comparative Prospective Cohort Study

  • Yura Chae,
  • Hye Eun Yoon,
  • Yoon Kyung Chang,
  • Young Soo Kim,
  • Hyung Wook Kim,
  • Bum Soon Choi,
  • Cheol Whee Park,
  • Ho Cheol Song,
  • Young Ok Kim,
  • Eun Sil Koh,
  • Sungjin Chung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10184191
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 18
p. 4191

Abstract

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Immunoglobulin M nephropathy (IgMN) is an idiopathic glomerulonephritis characterized by diffuse deposits of IgM in the glomerular mesangium. However, its renal prognosis remains unknown. We compared renal outcomes of IgMN patients with those of patients with minimal change disease (MCD), focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), or mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis (MsPGN) from a prospective observational cohort, with 1791 patients undergoing native kidney biopsy in eight hospitals affiliated with The Catholic University of Korea between December 2014 and October 2020. IgMN had more mesangial proliferation and matrix expansion than MsPGN and more tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis than MCD. IgMN patients had decreased eGFR than MCD patients in the earlier follow-up. However, there was no significant difference in urine protein or eGFR among all patients at the last follow-up. When IgMN was divided into three subtypes, patients with FSGS-like IgMN tended to have lower eGFR than those with MCD-like or MsPGN-like IgMN but higher proteinuria than MsPGN-like IgMN without showing a significant difference. The presence of hypertension at the time of kidney biopsy predicted ≥20% decline of eGFR over two years in IgMN patients. Our data indicate that IgMN would have a clinical course and renal prognosis similar to MCD, FSGS, and MsPGN.

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