Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
Renal Diseases
Nephrotic Syndrome Caused by Membranous Nephropathy: Response to a Short Course of Cyclophosphamide Alternating with Prednisolone
Shouichi FUJIMOTOSeiichirou HARAYuji SATOKazuhiro YAMADAShuichi HISANAGATanenao ETO
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

2004 Volume 43 Issue 1 Pages 30-34

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Abstract

  Objective  The optimal duration of immunosuppressive therapy and the timing of treatment for treating membranous nephropathy (MN) have yet to be established. We examined outcomes of a short course of cyclophosphamide alternating with prednisolone for MN patients with nephrotic syndrome.
  Methods and Patients  Cyclophosphamide (2 mg/kg/day for 8 weeks) combined with prednisolone (1 mg/kg every 48 hours for 8 weeks, then tapering off for 1 year) was prescribed for 28 MN patients (12 men and 16 women; mean age 52.4±2.25 years SEM). We first evaluated the response rates to this combined therapy, then compared the clinical characteristics of those who achieved remission (group A) with those who did not (group B) within 6 months of the start of treatment.
  Results  The incidences of complete and partial remission increased with the follow-up period; 32 and 21% by 6 months, 54 and 29% by 12 months, and 79 and 11% by 24 months, respectively. Serum IgG (906±100.8 versus 562±66.1 mg/day; p<0.01) was significantly higher in group A, and the selectivity index (CIgG/Calbumin 0.16±0.015 versus 0.30±0.040; p<0.01), significantly lower. Nephrotic syndrome persisted in 3 group B patients (23%), who finally had impaired renal function.
  Conclusion  MN patients with nephrotic syndrome responded favorably to a short course of cyclophosphamide combined with prednisolone. The serum IgG level and selectivity index may serve as markers of early response to this treatment.

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© 2004 by The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
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