Background: A high prevalence of chronic kidney disease among children with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) leads to a permanent quest for good predictors of kidney dysfunction. Thus, we carried out a retrospective cohort study in order to examine known clinical and morphological predictors of adverse outcome, as well as to investigate glomerular nestin expression as a potential new early predictor of kidney dysfunction in children with FSGS. Relationships between nestin expression and clinical and morphological findings were also investigated.
Methods: Among 649 renal biopsy samples, obtained from two children's hospitals, FSGS was diagnosed in 60 children. Thirty-eight patients, who met the criteria for this study, were followed up for 9.0 ± 5.2 years. Using Kaplan-Meier and Cox's regression analysis, potential clinical and morphological predictors were applied in two models of prediction: after disease onset and after the biopsy.
Results: The present study revealed the following significant predictors of kidney dysfunction: patients' ages at disease onset, as well as age at biopsy, resistance to corticosteroid treatment, serum creatinine level, urine protein/creatinine ratio, vascular involvement, tubular atrophy, interstitial fibrosis, and decreased glomerular nestin expression.
Conclusions: The most important finding of our study is that nestin can be used as a potential new early morphological predictor of kidney dysfunction in childhood onset of FSGS, since nestin has been obviously decreased in both sclerotic and normal glomeruli seen by light microscopy.