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1/3. IgA nephritis in HIV-positive patients: a new HIV-associated nephropathy?

    Four HIV-positive patients were shown to have IgA-associated nephritis on biopsy, including one with anaphylactoid purpura. Three were homosexuals, while the fourth acquired the infection from his mother. All had hematuria, a variable degree of proteinuria and renal disease with a benign course. Serologic studies showed elevated levels of IgA as well as IgA immune complexes and rheumatoid factor. IgA antibodies to multiple hiv antigens were detected by Western blot. Pathologic studies showed tubuloreticular inclusions in endothelial cells and nuclear bodies in interstitial cells in all cases. hiv antigens were not detected in kidney biopsies by monoclonal antibodies nor was HIV viral genome demonstrated by in situ hybridization. The possibility that this represents a unique type of IgA-associated HIV nephropathy is discussed.
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keywords = antigen
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2/3. The uncertain significance of anti-glomerular basement membrane antibody among HIV-infected persons with kidney disease.

    Glomerular lesions that complicate patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection include HIV-associated nephropathy, membranous glomerulopathy, and immune-complex glomerulonephritides. This case series presents 3 patients with clinically significant renal disease and positive test results for anti-glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) antigen. Characteristic histological findings that would suggest anti-GBM antibodies have a significant role in the pathological state of each patient's kidney disease were absent. In addition, each patient recovered without specific treatment for anti-GBM disease. This case series suggests that anti-GBM antibodies likely are related to the B-cell expansion previously described in patients with HIV infection. We propose that clinicians interpret results of anti-GBM antibody tests carefully for patients with HIV infection, considering biopsy before empiric therapy, particularly in a clinical presentation that is atypical for Goodpasture disease.
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3/3. HIV-associated immune-mediated renal disease.

    Although focal glomerulosclerosis is the most common renal disease, other proliferative glomerulonephritides are encountered in HIV-infected patients. We studied four HIV-infected patients with renal insufficiency, proteinuria, and proliferative glomerulonephritis, consistent with immune-mediated disease, to investigate the role of the virus and immune complexes in the pathogenesis of the nephropathy. Circulating immune complexes (CICs) and HIV-reactive antibodies were measured and characterized in each patient. Renal biopsy tissue was acid eluted, and the eluate analyzed. dna extracted from biopsies was subjected to the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect HIV genome. CICs were detected in each patient: an IgA-p24 HIV antigen complex and an IgG antibody-gp 120 HIV antigen complex in two patients; two patients had an IgG-p24 HIV antigen complex. Identical complexes were eluted from renal tissue in the first three patients; p24 HIV antigen, and complement from the fourth. The eluted antibodies reacted with the hiv antigens from the isolated CICs. Direct immunofluorescence for viral antigen in the eluted glomerular tissue revealed hiv antigens; PCR confirmed the presence of gag genome in all four biopsies. We conclude both circulating and in-situ HIV antigen-specific immune complexes may be associated with glomerulonephritis in HIV infected patients. Viral incorporation into renal tissue may be important in the pathogenesis of HIV-associated renal disease.
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ranking = 4
keywords = antigen
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