Clinical and Histologic Predictors of Kidney Outcomes in C3 Glomerulopathy and Idiopathic Membranoproliferative GN — Malak Ghaddar (2025) | RDL Network
Clinical and Histologic Predictors of Kidney Outcomes in C3 Glomerulopathy and Idiopathic Membranoproliferative GN
Article 2025 en
Authors
MG
Malak Ghaddar
FC
Fernando Caravaca‐Fontán
MP
Manuel Praga
Abstract
2 min read
Key Points Lower eGFR, paraprotein presence, and interstitial fibrosis were associated with a higher risk of kidney outcome. Native disease (versus recurrence post-transplantation), White ethnicity, and lower C4 levels were associated with a lower risk of kidney outcome. A 50% reduction in proteinuria from baseline to a value <1 g/d was associated with a lower risk of kidney outcome. Background C3 glomerulopathy (C3G) is a rare disease caused by abnormalities in the alternative complement pathway with significant overlap with idiopathic immune complex membranoproliferative GN (IC-MPGN). The risk factors of kidney outcomes in these conditions remain controversial, limited by small studies. We aimed to identify and assess risk factors associated with kidney outcomes. Methods Using a cohort of 225 patients with C3G or idiopathic IC-MPGN from three international centers, we evaluated the association between clinical and histologic variables and a composite outcome of a 30% decline in eGFR or ESKD, using Cox proportional hazards models. A prediction model was derived and internally validated through bootstrap resampling. Results In a multivariable model, lower eGFR, paraprotein presence, and interstitial fibrosis were associated with a higher outcome risk, whereas native disease (versus recurrence post-transplantation), White ethnicity, and lower C4 levels were associated with lower risk. The prediction model including these variables performed well (R 2 D : 53%, C-statistic: 0.84 [95% confidence interval, 0.82 to 0.86], integrated calibration index: 0.31) and maintained robustness after internal validation. A 50% reduction in proteinuria from baseline to a value <1 g/d was associated with a lower risk of outcome independent of other risk factors (hazard ratio, 0.35; 95% confidence interval, 0.12 to 0.97). Conclusions Our study evaluated the baseline clinical and histologic parameters associated with kidney outcomes using the largest C3G/idiopathic IC-MPGN cohort to date. These factors were included in a prediction model to assess individual patient risk. Our results provide an evidence-based definition of proteinuria remission that can be used for patient care and in clinical trials. Podcast This article contains a podcast at https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/www.asn-online.org/media/podcast/CJASN/2025_08_27_CJASNAugust.20.8.82.mp3
Fádi Fakhouri, Andrew S. Bomback, David Kavanagh, Giuseppe Remuzzi, Gere Sunder‐Plassmann, John Kanellis, Erica Daina, Patrick D. Walker, Zhongshen Wang, Zurish Ahmad
Marina Vivarelli, Andrew S. Bomback, Gema Ariceta, Antonio Mastrangelo, Carla Nester, Giuseppe Remuzzi, Nicole C. A. J. van de Kar, Zhongshen Wang, Johan Szamosi, Dima Decker, Lenny Gallardo, Fádi Fakhouri
Daniel P. Gale, Andrew S. Bomback, Christoph Licht, Carla Nester, Matthew C. Pickering, Giuseppe Remuzzi, Nicole C. A. J. van de Kar, Zhongshen Wang, Johan Szamosi, Dima Decker, Luis Fernando Barba-Gallardo, Fádi Fakhouri
Carla Nester, Steven D. Podos, Jonathan Hogan, Gerald B. Appel, Andrew S. Bomback, Koen Bouman, Terry Cook, Erica Daina, Bradley P. Dixon, Craig B. Langman, Liz Lightstone, Jane A. Thanassi, Kara Rice, Mingjun Huang, Samir M. Parikh, Matthew C. Pickering, John Sperati, Howard Trachtman, James A. Tumlin, Jack F.M. Wetzels, Giuseppe Remuzzi
David Kavanagh, Andrew S. Bomback, Gema Ariceta, Antonio Mastrangelo, Carla Nester, Giuseppe Remuzzi, Marina Vivarelli, Zhongshen Wang, Johan Szamosi, Dima Decker, Lenny Gallardo, Fádi Fakhouri
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.