Usutani S, Nosaka H, Shirai M, Akimoto H, Kojima K, Shimomura M, Kakuta S, Nagase M, Sado Y
Department of Medicine, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Nihon Jinzo Gakkai Shi. 1997 Jul;39(5):512-6.
A case of 49-year-old man with anti-GBM antibody and who manifested pulmonary and renal symptoms at divergent times. Thirty-six years previously, renal disease with unneglectable degree of proteinuria was noticed. One month before admission, he was found by chance to have elevated serum creatine (Scr); 3.4 mg/dl. At admission, his Scr was 13.7 mg/dl and Hb 12.7 g/dl, TP 5.2 g/dl with 3+ proteinuria and no glucosuria. He was a heavy smoker and remained so while admitted. Renal biopsy presented fibrocellular crescents in 100% of glomeruli with striking tubulointerstitial involvement. Immunofluorescence showed linear IgG deposition along the glomerular capillary wall. Hemodialysis was instituted, and after 13 hospital days, anti-GBM antibody at admission was high at 128 U, with negative PANCA. Plasmapheresis was also performed, but on the next day pulmonary hemorrhage occurred with a concomitant rise of anti-GBM to 250 U. Thus, steroid pulse therapy was conducted in combination with plasmapheresis. Pulmonary hemorrhage subsided along with lowering of anti-GBM (48 U), but renal failure persisted. The patient died of septicemia. Based on the clinical course of the case, the term "anti-BM mediated disease" may more properly delineate the entity of the disease rather than the classical eponym "Goodpasture's disease" which requires coexistence of pulmo- and renal manifestations for definition.