In this issue of The Journal, Touma and colleagues map out the time to improvement or resolution of proteinuria in a historical cohort of patients with lupus nephritis (LN)1. More than 200 patients entered in the University of Toronto Lupus Clinic database and followed between 1970 and 2011 constituted the cohort for this analysis. Regardless of the time from the original diagnosis of lupus, the first identified onset of proteinuria functioned as the baseline for this study. From that point onward, the time it took for recovery of proteinuria was measured. Recovery was defined as a 24 h urine protein of < 0.5 g. If a 24 h urine collection was not available, urine dipstick for albumin, or a random urine protein to creatinine ratio was used. For the Kaplan-Meier analysis of proteinuria over time, the maximum followup was 5.5 years. If a patient still had proteinuria at this time, the data were censored. Interestingly, the mean duration of lupus before the onset of proteinuria was more than 5 years.
None of the baseline characteristics, renal or extrarenal, predicted who would recover from proteinuria. Even the subgroup of patients with true nephrotic-range proteinuria had the same degree of ultimate resolution compared to those with subnephrotic protein excretion. Not surprisingly, the greater the proteinuria at baseline, the longer it took for recovery (the further you live from home, the longer it takes to get there). The presence of persistently low complement levels was associated with increased time to recovery, which again makes sense, as it can reflect either more aggressive, treatment-resistant disease or non-adherence to therapy. Biopsy class also did not appear to influence resolution or time to resolution, although it is regrettable that 20 patients with biopsy-proven lupus membranous nephropathy were excluded from analysis because of the absence of “active” urinary sediment. This speaks to the difference in significance placed on the presence of urinary casts by rheumatologists (very important) and nephrologists (not so important)2.
The most important finding of this study is that it takes a surprisingly long time for most patients to achieve resolution of proteinuria. In the first year of followup, little more than one-quarter of patients experienced this endpoint. After another year, recovery was up to half, and reached 74% at the end of 5 years. The lesson here: What is needed, for healing and repair of the glomerular capillary barrier, is time.
Glomerular damage associated with immune-complex deposition involves a combination of direct and indirect tissue injury that leads to a host of responses. Tissue response involves clotting, inflammation, epithelial regeneration, and mesenchymal repair by fibrosis or sclerosis. These processes occur serially during the acute phase, with some overlap (reviewed in Hagemann, et al3). However, under the continuous generation of immune complexes, as frequently happens in LN, this overlap leads to persistence of some of these mechanisms, e.g., inflammation and healing, which often leads to glomerular scarring, significant parenchymal atrophy, and fibrosis3.
The persistence of classically activated mononuclear phagocytes or repetitive/persistent triggers of kidney injury also impairs epithelial repair in the tubulointerstitial compartment4. In addition, severe or continuous kidney injury may eradicate tubular progenitor cells3. Insufficient regeneration of injured tubular epithelial cells leads to tubular atrophy and nephron loss, characteristic of progressive chronic kidney disease5. Therefore, coordinated epithelial regeneration is needed in response to injury, which first requires vascular sealing and the resolution of inflammation. Loss of glomerular visceral epithelial cells (podocytes) cannot be easily repaired, leading to segmental glomerular scarring5,6. Mesangial cells contribute to the sclerosis by excess production of mesangial matrix7. Podocytes undergo apoptosis in immune complex-mediated glomerular disease induced by overexpression of transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β)3. Parietal epithelial cells produce extracellular matrix, contributing to the segmental areas of glomerular scarring8. Unfortunately, the scarring process acquires its own dynamic and progresses to global glomerulosclerosis, even when the original insult has resolved9. Finally, compensatory hyperfiltration of the remaining glomeruli adds more hemodynamic stress on the surviving podocytes9.
LN is a histopathological entity resulting from the deposit of immune complexes at different locations in the glomerulus. Proteinuria is a major feature of LN and reflects injury of the podocytes10. Protein in the urine can be the result of immune complexes sited along the glomerular basement membrane (GBM), or the result of subendothelial immune deposits, endothelial cell swelling, podocyte damage, or scarring and remodeling of the GBM. Additionally, proteinuria is a major mediator of progressive interstitial fibrosis in any chronic proteinuric disorder10.
Therefore renal epithelial cells determine much of the kidney’s functions in the glomerular compartment (filtration barrier) as well as in the tubular compartment of the kidney (reabsorption and secretion). Loss of podocyte regeneration is the predominant cause of chronic dysfunction, persistent proteinuria, and progression to chronic kidney disease11.
C5b-9 formation and insertion into podocyte cell membranes causes glomerular injury12. The continuous presence of the immune complexes will generate the consecutive remodeling of the GBM as an attempt at healing3,12. Subepithelial immune deposits against anti-dsDNA, anti-nucleosomes, and nephritogenic autoantibodies to laminin and collagen IV as well as other, largely unidentified antigens initiate podocyte injury in LN, activating complement13. C5b-9 in sublytic quantities stimulates podocytes to produce proteases, oxidants, prostanoids, extracellular matrix components, and cytokines including TGF-β12. These events result in disruption of the functional integrity of the glomerular basement membrane and the protein filtration barrier, with subsequent development of proteinuria3. Complement components in the proteinuric urine also induce tubular epithelial cell injury and mediate progressive interstitial disease12,14.
Glomerular capillary hypertension is a common denominator in various forms of progressive glomerular disease, including immune-complex mediated glomerulonephritis (GN)9. There is an increase in the number of apoptotic podocytes after mechanical stretch secondary to hyperfiltration13,15, and it is likely that upregulation of local angiotensin II production, and expression of angiotensin type 1 receptor in podocytes by mechanical strain is responsible13. These observations provide a rationale for the inhibition of angiotensin II, a major mediator of increased glomerular pressure, in patients with lupus immune-complex mediated GN by the use of angiotensin-converting inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers15. All of these findings suggest that, in the presence of glomerular hypertension, mechanical stretch may aggravate podocyte injury induced by antibody and complement16.
Recognition of podocyte biology and complex inflammatory/healing mechanisms in lupus injury is essential for understanding the “incomplete” response to therapy and the presence of proteinuria even in the absence of activity of the disease. Loss of podocytes in combination with limitations in their compensatory proliferation in response to injury, as well as the presence of residual inflammation and remodeling of the GBM may be responsible for persistent proteinuria in the absence of further activity of the original insult. Further, tubular dysfunction leads to reduced reabsorption of protein that passes through the glomerular capillary barrier, leading to proteinuria, even in the face of minor glomerular abnormalities. Therefore, persistent or residual proteinuria may not be the ideal characteristic for monitoring response to therapy or making therapeutic decisions in LN.
There is an important lesson to be learned from primary (non-lupus) membranous nephropathy, where the causative antibody [anti-phospholipase-A2 receptor (aPLA2R)] has been isolated17. It is clear from the time course of the aPLA2R level in the blood that there is a lag between disappearance of the causative antibody and the improvement in the proteinuria (Figure 1). It may not make sense to subject patients to intensive immunosuppressive therapy once the antibody is no longer measureable. However the patient who continues to receive therapy based on the degree of proteinuria would be exposed to the risks of immunosuppression during this antibody-negative lag phase. In lupus nephropathy, because the causative antibody is unknown and unmeasurable, many (if not most) clinicians continue to press on with immunosuppression in the face of continuing proteinuria, when perhaps production and circulation of the culprit antibody has regressed and aggressive immunosuppression is no longer necessary. In other words, the active immune-mediated inflammation has been appropriately treated, but it takes time for the proteinuria to resolve; and scarring or tubulointerstitial fibrosis may mean that the proteinuria never completely goes away.
The delay in resolution of proteinuria is not unique to the data of Touma, et al1. In a recent review of outcome of both pure lupus membranous and mixed membranous/proliferative nephritis in 103 patients in Italy, it also took years for either nephritis to remit completely (Figure 2). By 17 months, half the mixed nephritis group was in renal remission, and it took 3 years to achieve remission in 50% of patients with pure lupus membranous nephropathy18. Similarly, a combined analysis of the small number of patients with lupus membranous nephritis included in the American study of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) versus cyclophosphamide and the ALMS trial showed that at 24 weeks the 24 h urine protein was approximately 2 g no matter which therapy was received19,20.
The MAINTAIN trial examined the endpoint of renal flare after induction therapy with 3 g of intravenous cyclophosphamide and glucocorticoid over 12 weeks, followed by “maintenance” with either azathioprine or MMF21. It is interesting that at 12 weeks the 24 h urine protein (after the high dose corticosteroid and fortnightly cyclophosphamide regimen) was still 3 g. In this study, the renal response was defined not by disappearance of proteinuria, but a > 50% reduction. While there was a slow continuous reduction in 24 h protein, it appears from the figures that, on average, the value oscillated between 0.5 and 1.0 g at 36 months21.
In the ALMS study mentioned above, the majority of patients had proliferative lupus nephritis20. It is important to note that at the end of the induction period of 24 weeks, less than 9% of the patients met all the criteria for renal remission. Although the criterion for resolution of proteinuria was generous (in patients with nephrotic-range protein excretion, a decrease to < 3 g/day; in patients with baseline subnephrotic proteinuria, a decrease > 50%) only about 25% of patients achieved even this goal. In the extension phase of this trial, where patients were rerandomized to maintenance therapy with either MMF or azathioprine22, the endpoint of the study was to prevent renal relapse. However, it was noted that patients receiving either drug continued to improve over time so that eventually about 60% of patients sustained complete remission. As the authors commented “This finding suggests that the distinction between induction therapy and maintenance therapy in patients with lupus nephritis may be an artificial one”22.
In the studies discussed above, the primary renal endpoint was time to relapse, and it is only upon closer scrutiny that the surprising length of time becomes clear that it takes for improvement in renal indices. Touma and colleagues have added importantly to the literature by putting the focus of their study on the length of time needed for healing of the glomeruli and resolution of proteinuria. The Germans have an expression for this: Abwarten und Tee trinken, which means “sit back and drink tea.” This may be an important lesson for clinicians managing lupus nephritis. In the appropriate setting it may be best to allow time for the proteinuria to resolve, rather than continuing or escalating immunosuppression in an attempt to hasten recovery.