Cyclosporine (CsA) is the first of a new order of pharmacological immune suppressants and represents a significant advance in the clinical control of graft rejection. In laboratory animals, its capacity to prolong allograft survival has been well documented, including reports of indefinite donor-specific immunological tolerance after shortterm CsA treatment. There is also evidence that CsA can inhibit the onset or progress of a variety of experimental autoimmune diseases. Underlying these properties of the drug is its capacity to selectively interfere with T helper cell activation and lymphokine production, although some direct effects on B cells have also been reported. In addition, sparing of suppressor cells may in part explain the mode of action of CsA which, at the molecular level, is not understood. CsA-induced nephrotoxicity in the rat has been extensively studied and is characterized by reversible proximal tubular cell damage. This problem may be aggravated by concomitant administration of other potentially nephrotoxic drugs, such as gentamicin, or by therapeutic agents which interfere with the metabolism of CsA. CsA is metabolized in the liver and excreted in the bile. Although the pathway of hepatic metabolism of CsA has not been precisely elucidated, animal studies suggest that agents capable of inducing metabolism of the drug CsA could be used to alleviate its nephrotoxic properties.
In IgA nephropathy the interstitium is the main site of altered beta 1 integrin expression. Glomerular crescents also express several beta 1 integrins, but we found no differences in the intensity of integrin expression on mesangial cells. Altered beta 1 integrin expression may play a role in tubulointerstitial scarring in IgA disease. Thus modulation of integrin expression might attenuate this process.
A retrospective analysis of all renal biopsies performed in the Grampian Region of Scotland during 1977–1980 revealed that IgA nephropathy was the most frequently encountered glomerular lesion. The commonest indications for renal biopsy were the presence of asymptomatic urinary abnormalities (90/184; 48.9%) especially asymptomatic haematuria (42/184; 22.8%). A histological diagnosis was made in 36 of the 42 patients presenting with asymptomatic haematuria (85.7%); 16 of the 26 cases of IgA nephropathy presented in this way. Overall, IgA nephropathy was detected in 14.1% of all biopsies and accounted for 21.8% of primary glomerular diseases. This study indicates that IgA nephropathy is apparently more common in Grampian than elsewhere in the United Kingdom. However, it is suggested that this does not represent a true variation in the prevalence of the condition; IgA nephropathy is probably a common cause of haematuria in the United Kingdom.
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