Bierzynska Agnieszka, Saleem Moin
University of Bristol, Bristol Royal Hospital for Children, Bristol, UK.
F1000Res. 2017 Feb 9;6:121. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.10165.1. eCollection 2017.
Idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (INS) is one of the most common glomerular diseases in children and adults, and the central event is podocyte injury. INS is a heterogeneous disease, and treatment is largely empirical and in many cases unsuccessful, and steroids are the initial mainstay of therapy. Close to 70% of children with INS have some response to steroids and are labelled as steroid-'sensitive', and the rest as steroid-'resistant' (also termed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis), and single-gene mutations underlie a large proportion of the latter group. The burden of morbidity is enormous, both to patients with lifelong chronic disease and to health services, particularly in managing dialysis and transplantation. The target cell of nephrotic syndrome is the glomerular podocyte, and podocyte biology research has exploded over the last 15 years. Major advances in genetic and biological understanding now put clinicians and researchers at the threshold of a major reclassification of the disease and testing of targeted therapies both identified and novel. That potential is based on complete genetic analysis, deep clinical phenotyping, and the introduction of mechanism-derived biomarkers into clinical practice. INS can now be split off into those with a single-gene defect, of which currently at least 53 genes are known to be causative, and the others. Of the others, the majority are likely to be immune-mediated and caused by the presence of a still-unknown circulating factor or factors, and whether there is a third (or more) mechanistic group or groups remains to be discovered. Treatment is therefore now being refined towards separating out the monogenic cases to minimise immunosuppression and further understanding how best to stratify and appropriately direct immunosuppressive treatments within the immune group. Therapies directed specifically towards the target cell, the podocyte, are in their infancy but hold considerable promise for the near future.
特发性肾病综合征(INS)是儿童和成人中最常见的肾小球疾病之一,其核心病变是足细胞损伤。INS是一种异质性疾病,治疗大多基于经验,且在许多情况下并不成功,类固醇是初始治疗的主要手段。近70%的INS患儿对类固醇有一定反应,被标记为类固醇“敏感”,其余则为类固醇“抵抗”(也称为局灶节段性肾小球硬化),后者很大一部分是由单基因突变引起的。这种疾病给终身慢性病患者和医疗服务带来了巨大的发病负担,尤其是在管理透析和移植方面。肾病综合征的靶细胞是肾小球足细胞,在过去15年里,足细胞生物学研究有了飞速发展。目前在遗传和生物学认识方面取得的重大进展,使临床医生和研究人员即将对该疾病进行重大重新分类,并对已确定和新发现的靶向治疗方法进行测试。这种潜力基于完整的基因分析、深入的临床表型分析以及将基于机制的生物标志物引入临床实践。INS现在可以分为单基因缺陷型,目前已知至少有53个基因与之相关,以及其他类型。在其他类型中,大多数可能是免疫介导的,由一种或多种未知循环因子的存在引起,是否存在第三种(或更多)机制类型仍有待发现。因此,现在的治疗正在细化,以区分出单基因病例,尽量减少免疫抑制,并进一步了解如何在免疫介导组中最好地分层和合理指导免疫抑制治疗。专门针对靶细胞足细胞的治疗尚处于起步阶段,但在不久的将来有很大的前景。