Chronic Tubulointerstitial Nephritis Flashcards

1
Q

Background on CTIN

A

CTIN is characterized by tubulointerstitial scarring and fibrosis, tubular atrophy, with or without significant macrophage and lymphocytic infiltration.

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2
Q

CTIN

Clinical Manifestations of CTIN

A

Patients are typically asymptomatic with incidental abnormal laboratory findings:

Mild proteinuria < 1.5 to 2.0 g/d

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3
Q

CTIN

Clinical Manifestations of CTIN

A

Proteinuria is predominantly LMW proteins.

“Bland” urinalysis: no (or rare granular) casts, minimal white and/or red blood cells

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4
Q

CTIN

Clinical Manifestations of CTIN

A

Anemia severity out of proportion to degree of kidney injury due to damage of peritubular erythropoietin producing cells

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5
Q

CTIN

Clinical Manifestations of CTIN

A

Other signs of tubular injury may be present: sodium wasting, metabolic acidosis, Fanconi syndrome, nephrogenic insipidus.

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6
Q

CTIN

Histopathology of CTIN

A

Fibrotic hypocellular interstitium

Tubular Atrophy

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7
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

A

Common causes (drugs, crystals [e.g., calcium phosphate, uric acid, oxalate], infections, autoimmune, obstruction, chronic ischemia, heavy metals)

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8
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Analgesic nephropathy:

A

Traditionally referred to the chronic use of the drug mixture containing (phenacetin, paracetamol, or acetaminophen) plus (salicylate) plus a potentially addicting agent (caffeine or codeine). Any of the drugs belonging to the first group can be metabolized to acetaminophen and subsequent toxic metabolites which require glutathione for detoxification. Accumulation of these toxic metabolites may form covalent bonds with kidney tissue and induce tissue injury and vascular endothelial damage. Salicylate is a glutathione depletor which can limit the neutralization process of toxic metabolites of acetaminophen.

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9
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Analgesic nephropathy:

A

Analgesic nephropathy affects predominantly the medulla and papillary tip. Characteristic presentations include CKD, CT revealing papillary necrosis and calcifications, or kidney ultrasound revealing small echogenic kidneys

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10
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Analgesic nephropathy:

A

Single analgesic use may also lead to analgesic nephropathy.

Acetaminophen:

There are data to suggest that chronic, daily, high dose use of acetaminophen may lead to long-term nephrotoxicity in women.

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11
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Analgesic nephropathy:

A

Salicylates: Most studies suggest that the long-term use of daily therapeutic dose of aspirin (ASA) alone (i.e., without concurrent use of acetaminophen) do not lead to kidney injury.

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12
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Analgesic nephropathy:

A

NSAIDS:

High dose of NSAIDS may induce CKD in those with underlying or high risk for kidney injury, but not in healthy individuals.

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13
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Lithium-induced kidney injury:

A

Chronic interstitial nephritis: characterized by cortical and medullary distal and collecting tubular dilatations/cysts, tubular atrophy, and interstitial fibrosis

Toxic intracellular lithium levels are thought to alter primary cilia function and lead to tubular cyst formation.

Commonly associated glomerular lesions: global sclerosis, FSGS, minimal change disease.

Lithium may also be associated with nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, distal RTA, hypercalcemia, and hypothyroidism.

Severe lithium-associated tubulointerstitial nephropathy with diffuse interstitial fibrosis, tubular cysts, dilations, and tubular atrophy (flattened tubular epithelial cells) and relative sparing of glomeruli. Tubular cysts may be evident on CT imaging.

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14
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Lithium-induced kidney injury

Management:

A

Discontinue lithium if safe and possible (there are reports of patients committing suicide with lithium discontinuation).

Routine CKD management to slow down progression of disease

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15
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Lithium-induced kidney injury

Management:

A

Amiloride may be considered to reduce lithium reabsorption at collecting tubules.

Thiazides may be considered in the treatment of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus.

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16
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Drug-induced CTIN:

Famotidine:

A

case report of famotidine-induced autoantibody formation against carbonic anhydrase II in the kidneys

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17
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Malakoplakia:

A

Rare granulomatous disease of infectious etiology (bacterial, fungal, tuberculosis, etc.)

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18
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Malakoplakia:

A

Presents as friable yellow plaques that may involve urinary tract, GI tract, other visceral organs, skin (erythematous nodular lesions, ulcerations, to draining fistulas/abscesses).

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19
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Malakoplakia:

A

Seen in immunocompromised hosts (e.g., diabetes mellitus, malignancy, malnutrition, alcoholism, immunosuppressive therapy)

20
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Malakoplakia:

Pathogenesis:

A

Pathogenesis: thought to be due to poor T-cell function, inadequate killing of bacteria by macrophages, or defective phagolysosomal activity by monocytes. Inadequate levels of intracellular cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) have been attributed to reduced microtubular function and lysosomal activity, hence ineffective bacterial killing. Accumulation of partially digested bacteria in monocytes or macrophages leads to calcium and iron deposition on residual bacterial glycolipids. The presence of the resulting basophilic inclusion structure, the Michaelis–Gutmann (MG) body, is considered pathognomonic for malakoplakia.

21
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Malakoplakia:

Diagnosis:

A

Diagnosis: urine culture and biopsy

Imaging studies may reveal mass-like lesions, mimicking renal cell carcinoma (RCC).

22
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Malakoplakia:

Histopathology:

A

Haematoxylin and eosin staining reveals sheets of histiocytes with basophilic inclusions with concentric laminations (MG bodies). These MG bodies may be stained for calcium and iron. EM: MG bodies consist of lysosomes filled with partially digested bacteria. Identification of responsible organism may be possible with bacterial gram staining or immune staining with antibody against Mycobacterium bovis.

23
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Malakoplakia:

Management:

A

Surgical, antibiotics (e.g., quinolones, trimethoprim-sulfomethoxazole), bethanecol (choline agonist), ascorbic acid. The latter two agents are thought to increase levels of cGMP.

24
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis

A

Condition associated with chronic obstruction (e.g., staghorn calculi) and urinary tract infections with resulting granulomatous inflammation and diffuse cellular infiltrate of lipid-laden foam cells replacing normal renal parenchyma. CT may reveal low-density masses with associated calcifications resembling malignancy.

25
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis

A

Clinical manifestations: commonly affect middle-aged women who may present with fevers/chills, chronic flank pain, possibly palpable mass. Urine cultures may reveal common gram-negative organisms such as Escherichia coli, Klebsiella, Proteus and less commonly staphylococcal species.

26
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis

Management:

A

organism specific antibiotics, surgical resection as needed

27
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Emphysematous pyelonephritis

A

Life-threatening necrotizing acute pyelonephritis ± obstruction, predominantly seen in diabetic patients that is caused by gas-forming organisms such as E. coli, Klebsiella pneumonia, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Proteus mirabilis.

28
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

Emphysematous pyelonephritis

A

Gas pockets may be detected on plain abdominal radiograph, ultrasound, or CT.

Management: organism-specific antibiotics, relief of obstruction and surgical resection as needed

29
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

HIV immune restoration inflammatory syndrome (IRIS):

A

Seen in patients with prolonged severe immunodeficiency, recently treated for an opportunistic infection, now receiving never-before-seen or intensified antiretroviral therapy with resultant marked viral load reduction, increase in CD4, and multiorgan inflammatory response

30
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Infection-related CTIN:

HIV immune restoration inflammatory syndrome (IRIS):

A

Kidney involvement may manifest as interstitial nephritis with granulomas.

Treatment: prednisone 1 mg/kg/d × 1 month followed by taper.

31
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Heavy metal–associated CTIN:

Lead (Pb):

A

Pathogenesis: thought to be due to chronic lead deposition and its associated toxicity in proximal tubules, hyperuricemia, and HTN

32
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Heavy metal–associated CTIN:

Lead (Pb):

A

Clinical manifestations:

Chronic: anemia with basophilic stippling, gout, CKD, peripheral motor neuropathies, perivascular cerebellar calcifications, small shrunken kidneys

33
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Heavy metal–associated CTIN:

Lead (Pb):

A

Acute lead intoxication: encephalopathy, abdominal pain, hemolytic anemia, Fanconi syndrome, and peripheral neuropathy

34
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Heavy metal–associated CTIN:

Lead (Pb):

A

Management:

Routine CKD management

Consider Pb chelation therapy.

35
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Heavy metal–associated CTIN:

Mercury:

A

Found in alloy and mirror plants, batteries

Mercury dichloride (HgCl2) may also induce acute tubular necrosis in addition to CTIN.

36
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Heavy metal–associated CTIN:

Cadmium:

A

Found in glass/metal alloy plants, electrical equipments

Outbreak of cadium toxicity in Japan due to industrial contamination lead to itai-itai, a.k.a. “ouch ouch” disease because of significant bone pain associated with condition. Kidney involvement includes hypercalciuria, kidney stones, proximal tubular dysfunction, anemia, CTIN.

37
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Heavy metal–associated CTIN:

Arsenic:

A

Found in poison gas, insecticides, weed killers, paints

Proximal RTA and CTIN

38
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

IgG4-related disease:

RIM- padrao estoriforme de fibrose e infiltrado intersticial

imagem= pequenos nodulos corticais

obs complemento pode ser baixo

A

characterized by dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate rich in IgG4-positive plasma cells, storiform fibrosis, with or without associated elevated serum IgG4 concentrations=
Elevated serum IgG4 (although 30% have normal values)

Mass lesions in various organs including pancreas, enlarged salivary glands, kidneys (TIN), lungs, lymph nodes, meninges, aorta, breast, prostate, thyroid, pericardium, skin, and even bone (destructive lesions resembling granulomatous polyangiitis). FIBROSE RETROPERITONEAL

Patient characteristics:

Male predominance (estimated 62% to 83% are males)

Older age (i.e., >50 years)

Up to 40% with history of allergic diseases (e.g., bronchial asthma or chronic sinusitis)

Affected tissue biopsy is characterized by:
Dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates consisting of lymphocytes, plasma cells, eosinophils, and fibroblasts

Ratio of IgG4-bearing plasma cells to IgG-bearing plasma cells > 50% is highly suggestive of IgG4-related disease.

Obliterative phlebitis

Storiform fibrosis (likened to cartwheel pattern)

39
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

IgG4-related disease:

Pathogenesis is thought to involve:

A

Autoimmune process or presence of an infectious agent that trigger an immune response driven predominantly by type 2 helper T (Th2) cells and activation of regulatory T (Treg) cells. The influx of inflammatory cells leads to multiorgan enlargement, cytokine release, eosinophilia, elevated IgG4 and IgE levels, and eventual progression to fibrosis of affected organs.

40
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

IgG4-related disease:

Treatment of IgG4-related disease:

A

Glucocorticoids: suggested regimen: prednisolone 0.6 g/kg body weight/d for 2 to 4 weeks, tapered over 3 to 6 months to 5 mg/d and maintain for up to 3 years.

Others: Azathioprine (AZA), mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), and methotrexate have been suggested as glucocorticoid-sparing agents.

For recurrent or refractory disease, consider rituximab.

Relapse may occur.

41
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

Balkan nephropathy-like CTIN:

A

Arises from chronic exposure to aristolochic acid (environmental or contaminant from herbal preparation)

Associated with uroepithelial malignancies

42
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

Mesoamerican nephropathy:

A

Described in Central America

Affects predominantly males, often sugar cane field workers

43
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

Mesoamerican nephropathy:

A

Underlying etiology thought to be due to repeated exposures to severe dehydration and rehydration, hyperosmolality-stimulated aldose reductase activity leading to conversion of glucose to sorbitol and fructose with subsequent metabolism by fructokinase to oxidant mediators. Exacerbating or contributing factors may include concurrent high intake of fructose and/or NSAIDS, contaminated drinking water (e.g., arsenic, pesticides), leptospirosis, and/or genetic susceptibility.

44
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

Mesoamerican nephropathy:

A

Typical manifestations: mild proteinuria, hyperuricemia, hypokalemia

Kidney biopsy is characterized by extensive glomerulosclerosis, tubular atrophy, and interstitial fibrosis. Of note, glomerulosclerosis is a prominent feature of this condition which is thought to reflect glomerular ischemic injury.

45
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

A

Inflammatory bowel disease is associated with an increased risk of CTIN, independent of exposure to 5-aminosalicylates. Although 5-aminosalicylates may be associated with ATIN.

46
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

Granulomatous (noncaseating) CTIN:

A

common causes

Drugs: sulfas, synthetic penicillins, NSAIDS, thiazides, quinolones

47
Q

CTIN

Causes of CTIN

Other conditions associated with CTIN:

Granulomatous (noncaseating) CTIN:

A

Infections: tuberculosis, leprosy, xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis, histoplasmosis, glandular fever

Systemic diseases: granulomatous polyangiitis, sarcoidosis.

Others: urate, oxalosis