Staphylococcus-associated glomerulonephritis

From IDWiki
Staphylococcus-associated glomerulonephritis


Background

Pathophysiology

  • IgA-mediated immune complex deposition

Epidemiology

Clinical Manifestations

Complications and Prognosis

Diagnosis

Diagnostic Criteria

Definitive Diagnosis

  • Culture-proven staphylococcal infection (ongoing or recent)
  • Acute-onset proliferative glomerulonephritis with IgA- and complement C3-containing glomerular immune complex deposites, acute kidney injury, nephrotic-range proteinuria, and hematuria

Additional Criteria

  • Presence of risk factors for infection: diabetes mellitus, intravenous drug use, recent surgical or invasive procedure, prosthetic devices such as pacemakers, heart valves or orthopaedic devices, poor dentition or tooth abscesses, multiple trauma with open wounds, non-healing ulcers or post-amputation wounds in diabetic patients, indwelling central or peripheral intravenous catheters or ventriculo-peritoneal shunt
  • Low serum C3 levels
  • Leukocytoclastic vasculitic rash (often has IgA staining on biopsy)
  • Positive ANCA serology, though may be only mildly elevated
  • Predominant C3 immunofluorescence with or without IgA staining in the mesangial and capillary walls with electron-dense immune deposits on ultrastructural examination
  • Subepithelial humps seen with electron microscopy

Management

  • Treat the underlying infection
  • Supportive care for the symptoms of acute nephritis
    • Hypertension: calcium channel blockers preferred, but can also use ACEi or ARBs
    • Fluid overload: diuresis and salt restriction
    • May need dialysis
  • Avoid immunosuppression

Further Reading

  • Epidemiology, pathogenesis, treatment and outcomes of infection-associated glomerulonephritis. Nat Rev Nephrol. 2020;16(1):32-50. doi: 10.1038/s41581-019-0178-8