Does truly 'idiopathic'crescentic glomerulonephritis exist?

R Angangco, S Thiru, VLM Esnault… - Nephrology Dialysis …, 1994 - academic.oup.com
R Angangco, S Thiru, VLM Esnault, AK Short, CM Lockwood, DBG Oliveira
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, 1994academic.oup.com
Crescentic glomerulonephritis is usually classified into antiglomerular basement membrane
(GBM) disease, immune-complex disease, or pauci-immune crescentic nephritis. The last
category includes patients with systemic vasculitis as well as 'idiopathic'isolated crescentic
nephritis. The presence of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) in many patients
with apparently isolated crescentic nephritis suggests that this represents a renal-limited
form of vasculitis, and that truly 'idiopathic'crescentic nephritis is a very rare entity. We …
Abstract
Crescentic glomerulonephritis is usually classified into antiglomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease, immune-complex disease, or pauci-immune crescentic nephritis. The last category includes patients with systemic vasculitis as well as ‘idiopathic’ isolated crescentic nephritis. The presence of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) in many patients with apparently isolated crescentic nephritis suggests that this represents a renal-limited form of vasculitis, and that truly ‘idiopathic’ crescentic nephritis is a very rare entity.
We reviewed all renal biopsies with extracapillary proliferation seen at our centre since the availability of an ANCA assay (4-year period). There were 89 such biopsies of a total of 1240, of which 82 had sufficient details for further analysis. Of these, 10 had anti-GBM disease, 35 had epithelial proliferation associated with a variety of other diseases, and 36 had ANCA-associated disease. Nine of this last group had no extrarenal features and would previously have been classified as ‘idiopathic’ crescentic glomerulonephritis. The single remaining patient had an inactive glomerulonephritis with a scarred crescent; the predominant lesion was an interstitial nephritis.
We therefore conclude that truly ‘idiopathic’ crescentic nephritis is very rare, if it exists at all. The ability to provide a practically complete classification of crescentic nephritis has important prognostic and therapeutic consequences.
Oxford University Press