Cystic kidney dz Flashcards

1
Q

Autosomal dominant polycystic disease

A

Most common inherited polycystic dz

Manifests in adulthood: 3rd-5th decade of life

Autosomal dominant, incomplete penetrance

Family history is positive only in 60% of cases

Nearly 50% of ADPKD pt’s reach ESRD before the age of 60

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2
Q

What are the genetics of ADPKD?

A

Mutations in PKD1 and/or PKD2, which encode membrane proteins called polycystins (PC1 and 2)

Homozygotes are lethal

Heterozygotes are likely affected by a “second hit” somatic mutation, leading to a loss of normal haplotype at tissue level

Trans-heterozygoes have a more severe clinical course- have mutations in both genes

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3
Q

What do PC1 and PC2 do?

A

Form the polycystin complex in ADPKD: the c-termini of PC1 and 2 bind and they form a complex

They live on motile cilia, in different parts of the body including the renal epithelium

They sense flow (in kidney: urinary flow) –> disrupted planar polarity –> cyst formation

Also you get increased rate of epithelial proliferation & increased fluid secretion

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4
Q

What are the common renal complications of ADPKD?

A

Hypertension

Flank/abdominal pain

Macroscopic hematuria: cyst hemorrhage, contact sports

Fever and abdominal pain: cyst infection

Kidney stones: stagnant urinary flow

Low-grade proteinuria: tubular dysfunction

Polyuria: decreased renal concentrating ability

Progressive decline in GFR: 50% at ESRD by age 60

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5
Q

What are the extrarenal complications of ADPKD?

A

Liver: hepatic cysts

Heart: PFO, mitral valve prolaps

GI: colonic diverticula

Subcutaneous, ovarian, testicular, pancreatic, and pulmonary cysts

Cerebral anuerysms: rare but letha; screen for those with positive fam hist for stroke or aneurysm or new onset severe headache; treat with enurysm coiling or clipping

Aortic aneurysms

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6
Q

How do you diagnose ADPKD?

A

Based on fam hist and imaging studies

Detectible cysts > 1cm in size via MRI and CT- more sensitive

In adults with + fam history, diagnostic criteria include:

Age < 30, at least 2 cysts

Age 30-60: at least 2 cysts in each kidney (bilateral)

Age >60: at least 4 cysts in each kidney

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7
Q

How do you treat renal complications of ADCKD?

A

Hypertension: salt restriction, ACEI or ARB to preserve renal function

Hematuria: due to intra-parenchymal or cyst hemorrhage; bed rest, analgesics, and hydration to increase the urinary flow to 2-3 L/day

Cyst infections: typically require hospital admission & iv abx; fluooroquinolones have good intra-cyst penetration

Renal stones: treatment similar to pt’s without ADPKD

Flank pain: acute pain - renal infx, cyst hemorrhage, renal stones
chronic pain: distention of kidney capsule or compression of abd structures

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8
Q

What’s the progression of ADPKD?

What’ss predictive of rate of progression?

A

Start with concentrating defect, htn, proteinurea

Progress to pain, hematuria, stones, infections

PKD2 have milder dz course and longer renal survival

Kidney volume is predictive of subsequent rate of progression

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9
Q

What is autosomal recessive PKD?

A

Childhood nephropathy

Affected children often present in utero with enlarged echogenic (light) kidneys and oligohydraminos secondary to poor urine output (Potter syndrome)

30% of affected neonates die shortly after birth as a result of severe pulm hydoplasia and resp insufficiency

Those who survive the perinatal period most commonly present with systemic htn, renal insufficiency, and portal htn

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10
Q

Potter syndrome

A

Renal failure in utero –> oligohydraminos= low volume of amniotic fluid –>

IUGR

Characteristic facial features

Lung hypoplasia (resp failure)

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11
Q

What is the molecular defect in ARPKD?

A

PKHD1 gene = fibrocystin, which is also on the cilia of the collecting duct

Bilary dysgenesis, portal htn, liver failure

Large echogenic kidneys, renal cysts, renal failure

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12
Q

What is Nephronophthisis?

A

Most frequent genetic cause of ESRD in children; usually ESRD by age 13

Initial sx are mild, start at approx age 6 yr, consist of polyuria, polydipsia, secondary enuresis & anemia

Renal US is useful only in advanced dz when you can see cysts

Renal histology = traid of corticomedullary cysts, tubular BM disruption, and tubulointerstitial fibrosis
** biopsy required for diagnosis

Most frequent extra-renal involvement includes:
Eye: retinitis pigmentosa
Brain: cerebellar vermis aplasia
Liver: liver fibrosis

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13
Q

What is the genetic mutation for NPHP?

A

Many different genes- lots of heterogeneity

They are all ciliary proteins

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14
Q

WHat is MCKD?

A

Medullary cystic kidney dz

Pathologically indistinguishable from NPHP but adult onset and AD mode of inheritance
- biopsy: tubule fibrosis, dilation, and TBM disruption

Renal manifestations are similar to NPHP: impairment of urine concentration ability & polyuria, absent or minimal proteinuria, no hematuria, RUSG with normal/small echogenic kidneys, no visible cysts

Extrarenal manifestations of hyperuricemia & gout (decreased uric acid excretion, low FeUA); no liver manifestations

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15
Q

What is the mutation in MCKD?

A

MCKD1 or MCKD2 = mucin 1 or muromodulin

Makes Uromodulin = a protein that’s normally produced by tubules, secreted in the urine, and cleared

Mutation –> altered uromodulin folding can’t seceret the protein –> trapping in the ER –> tubular epithelial damage –> interstitial fibrosis, defect in uric acid excretion, defect in urinary concentration

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16
Q

What is the relationship between uromodulin and CKD risk?

A

Shows that UMOD genetic variants are associated with risk of CKD in the general population

They all increase urinary uromodulin conc & are associated with risk of htn