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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Tubular cell damage may be the earliest sign of renal extrahepatic manifestation caused by Hepatitis C
Eliisa LöyttyniemiMartti FärkkiläSauli VuotiKati KaartinenRavinder J. SinghEero Honkanensubject
RNA virusesMalePhysiologyBiopsyComplement SystemHepacivirusUrineurologic and male genital diseasesGastroenterologyBiochemistry0302 clinical medicineImmune PhysiologyChronic Kidney DiseaseMedicine and Health SciencesPrevalenceMedicine030212 general & internal medicineStage (cooking)Young adultComplement ActivationPathology and laboratory medicineKidneyMultidisciplinaryProteinuriaImmune System Proteinsmedicine.diagnostic_testHepatitis C virusQRHepatitis CMedical microbiologyMiddle AgedHepatitis C3. Good healthBody FluidsProteinuriamedicine.anatomical_structureKidney TubulesTubular proteinuriaNephrologyVirusesMedicine030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyFemalemedicine.symptomAnatomyPathogensResearch ArticleAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyScienceImmunologySurgical and Invasive Medical ProceduresMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesYoung AdultSigns and SymptomsInternal medicineBiopsyRenal DiseasesHumansRenal Insufficiency ChronicAgedFlavivirusesbusiness.industryOrganismsViral pathogensBiology and Life SciencesProteinsKidneysRenal Systemmedicine.diseaseHepatitis virusesMicrobial pathogens3121 General medicine internal medicine and other clinical medicineImmune SystemClinical MedicinebusinessKidney diseasedescription
Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Kaartinen et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is one of the most well-known extrahepatic manifestations caused by hepatitis C infection (HCV). CKD is typically discovered at a late stage. HCVnephropathy may show different histopathologic patterns, as both glomerular and tubulointerstitial damage have been described. Identification of patients with early renal manifestations would be beneficial to provide treatment and avoid progression to CKD. The observational prospective single-center HCVKID study assessed the prevalence of early renal manifestations in patients with chronic HCV and compared these patients with HCVnegative healthy controls cross-sectionally. HCV-positive patients with and without renal manifestations were also compared to define biomarkers suitable for identifying early manifestations in standard clinical practice. Tubular proteinuria as judged by urine α 1-microglobulin was the most common early renal manifestation found in 11% in HCV-positive patients, followed by hematuria in 8%. Kidney filtration was statistically significantly lower among HCV-positive patients with renal manifestation according to any calculation method. There were no significant differences in duration of infection or stage of liver fibrosis between patients with or without renal manifestations. Tubular cell damage may be the earliest sign of renal dysfunction caused by HCV. Complement activation also correlates with the dysfunction, indicating of contribution to HCV-induced renal manifestations even in their early phase. Peer reviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-05-01 | PLoS ONE |