Introduction

Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) is a rare disease characterized by hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and acute renal failure secondary to thrombotic microangiopathy [1]. It is distinguished from typical or Shigatoxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) HUS by the absence of STEC infection. In recent years, aHUS has been found to be associated with complement alternative pathway dysregulation. In almost 60% of aHUS patients, mutations in genes encoding complement-regulating proteins are reported [2, 3]. Aside from mutations in these genes, aHUS has also been reported in cobalamin C (cblC) disease caused by mutations in the cblC MMACHC gene [4].

With respect to complement-regulating proteins, most mutations are seen in factor H (CFH) [3, 5, 6], but mutations in membrane cofactor protein (MCP or CD46) [3, 59] and factor I (CFI) [3, 5, 6, 911] are also known to predispose development of aHUS. Additionally, gain-of-function mutations in factor B (CFB) [6, 12, 13] and complement C3 (C3) are reported [6, 14]. Some patients have combined mutations. Functional CFH deficiency due to autoantibodies against CFH (αFH) have recently been described, which is highly associated with a polymorphic homozygous deletion of genes encoding CFH-related protein 1 and 3 (∆CFHR1/3) [1518]. Finally, mutations in the thrombomodulin gene (THBD), encoding membrane-bound thrombomodulin that modulates complement activation on cell surfaces, have been reported in aHUS [19]. Genetic complement anomalies are thought to be risk factors rather than the only cause of the disease, as patient relatives with the same mutation do not always exhibit disease activity. AHUS represents approximately 10% of pediatric HUS cases. More than 80% of cases are sporadic [2], with a better prognosis overall than familial cases, which have a higher mutation rate [6]. Knowledge about the impact of mutations in complement-regulating genes upon disease characteristics, response to treatment, and outcome in pediatric aHUS patients could help define therapeutic guidelines and be of prognostic value. Therefore, the aim of this study was to: (1) document the frequency of known genetic complement abnormalities in a cohort of Dutch and Belgian children diagnosed with aHUS, and (2) describe and compare disease characteristics, treatment, and clinical outcome of these children.

Methods

Study population

From 2001 to 2010, genomic DNA was analyzed for genetic disorders in complement-regulating genes (CFH, CFI, MCP, CFB, C3, THBD, and ∆CFHR1/3 with αFH) in 45 Dutch and Belgian pediatric patients diagnosed with aHUS by pediatric nephrologists at six university medical centers in The Netherlands and one in Belgium. Diagnosis of aHUS was based on the following findings: hemolytic anemia characterized by a hemoglobin (Hb) level <10 g/dl, thrombocytopenia with a platelet count <150 x 109/l, elevated levels of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and a negative Coombs test, all in association with acute renal impairment. Patients with STEC HUS were excluded by stool cultures, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for Shiga toxin, and/or serologic antibodies against LPS O157. Genetic analyses were combined with retrospectively obtained information about patient clinical presentation, received treatment, and outcome. Genetic analysis of 25 of these 45 patients has been published before in a cohort of adults and children by Westra et al. [9]. Patients in that and this study are indicated in the authors’ earlier study [9] by the following numbers 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9,15, 16, 18, 21, 24, 33, 36, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 48, 54, 58, 62. When two or more members of the same family were affected by the disease at least 6 months apart, it was considered as familial aHUS. Sporadic aHUS patients had no family history of the disease. Complete remission was defined by normalization of hematologic parameters (Hb >10 g/dl, thrombocytes >150x109/l, LDH <450U/l) and renal function [glomerular filtration rate (GFR) >80 ml/min/1.73 m2, no proteinuria]. In patients with partial remission, hematologic normalization was seen, but with renal sequelae (GFR <80 ml/min/1.73 m2 and/or proteinuria and/or hypertension). The presence of proteinuria was defined as >0.2 g/24 h or positive dipstick for proteins. Hypertension was defined as a consistent blood pressure >p95 for age and length. Recurrence was reported when a new episode of aHUS presented >4 weeks after remission. Chronic treatment was defined by the use of dialysis or plasma therapy for >3 months. The average follow-up time was 7.5 years, varying from two weeks in one patient previously diagnosed and still hospitalized at time of inclusion, to 17 years in one patient who reached adulthood. Permission to study DNA material was given by all patients and/or their parents.

Genetic analysis of genes encoding CFH, CFI, MCP, C3, CFB, and THBD

Genomic DNA was amplified for CFH [National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) RefSeq NM_000186.3], CFI (NM_000204.3), MCP (NM_002389.3), C3 (NM_000064.2), CFB (NM_001710.4), and THBD (NM_000361.2) by means of PCR. Primer data are available upon request. Fragments included DNA sequences of the individual exons and the splice donor and acceptor site. Amplimers were subjected to double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) sequence analysis on an ABI 3130 xl Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems). Sequence analysis was performed using Sequencher 4.8 software. Detected genetic aberrations were confirmed on a second PCR product. Genomic DNA from >100 healthy ethnically matched control individuals was used to confirm sequence variations that might be potentially pathogenic. Potential pathogenicity of genetic alterations was further checked in the literature, evolutionary conservation, and in silico prediction programs (Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant [SIFT; http://sift.jcvi.org/] and Polymorphism Phenotyping v2 [PolyPhen-2; http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph2/]). For evolutionary conservation, the 17-way vertebrate alignment from the University of California Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu) was used.

Autoantibodies against factor H (αFH) and homozygous deletion of CFHR1 and CFHR3 genes

Serum samples were tested for the presence of αFH by means of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), as described previously [20]. A positive control sample was kindly obtained via Dr. Dragon-Durey (Paris, France). Test results were considered positive if they were above twice the standard deviation (SD) calculated from controls, and samples were tested at least three times independently, as described by Dragon-Durey et al. [15]. Homozygous deletion of CFHR1 and CFHR3 was identified as described previously [9]. In short, genomic DNA was amplified by PCR using specific primers located in a 100-kb region downstream of CFH. Amplification of one of the fragments failed in case of ΔCFHR1/3. This method does not detect a heterozygous deletion of the two genes or the presence of a hybrid CFH/CFHR1 gene.

Results

Patients

Data on CFH, CFI, MCP, CFB, and C3 mutation characteristics are reported in Table 1. Data on patient characteristics at presentation, treatment, and clinical outcome for each type of mutation are reported in Tables 2, 3, 4. Due to the small number of patients per mutated complement protein, data were analyzed descriptively without statistical comparisons. Clinical data on the four patients with a combined mutation or a mutation in combination with a homozygous deletion in CFHR1/3 and αFH are given in Table 5. Forty-five patients diagnosed with aHUS from six different university medical centers in The Netherlands and one in Belgium were included. Approximately as many males as females were included in this study.

Table 1 Characteristics of mutations found in CFH, CFI, MCP, CFB, and C3 genes in 17 of 45 pediatric patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS)
Table 2 Characteristics at onset of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) in 45 pediatric patients with mutations in CFH, CFI, MCP, CFB, and C3, with a homozygous deletion in CFHR1/3 (∆CFHR1/3) and autoantibodies against CFH (αFH), as well as in patients without known genetic anomalies
Table 3 Treatment in 45 pediatric atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) patients with mutations in CFH, CFI, MCP, CFB, and C3, with a homozygous deletion in CFHR1/3 (∆CFHR1/3) and autoantibodies against CFH (αFH), as well as in patients without known genetic anomalies, and the outcomes of their first aHUS episode
Table 4 Long-term patient and renal graft outcomes in 45 pediatric atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) patients with mutations in CFH, CFI, MCP, CFB, and C3, with a homozygous deletion in CFHR1/3 (∆CFHR1/3) and autoantibodies against CFH (αFH), as well as in patients without known genetic anomalies
Table 5 Characteristics at disease onset, during treatment, and outcome of four pediatric atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) patients with combined mutations and/or with a homozygous deletion in CFHR1/3 (∆CFHR1/3) and/or autoantibodies against CFH (αFH)

Genetic anomalies

In 20 of the 45 patients (44%) heterozygous mutations in complement regulating genes and/or autoantibodies against CFH were found, all but one with a homozygous deletion in CFHR1/3 (Table 1). Five patients (overall 11%) carried a mutation in CFH, four (overall 9%) in MCP and also four in C3 (overall 9%). Three patients (overall 7%) had a mutation in CFI and two (overall 4%) in CFB. Six patients (overall 13%) had autoantibodies against CFH. Two of these patients with a genetic anomaly carried a combined mutation (CFI/MCP and CFI/C3). One patient had a CFI mutation and αFH with ∆CFHR1/3, and in one patient αFH were seen in combination with a C3 mutation but without ∆CFHR1/3. Patients with combined mutations are included in both their mutation groups in Tables 2, 3, 4. Characteristics at onset, treatment, and outcome of the four patients with combined genetic anomalies are also summarized separately (Table 5). No mutations in THBD were found in our cohort.

Clinical characteristics

Familial vs sporadic

Eleven patients (24%) had familial aHUS, of whom all except two had an associated mutation. We included one family with three sisters with a CFH mutation and another family with two cousins with a mutation in CFB. Of the other six patients with familial aHUS, only one family member was included in this study because further data were not available. All four patients in this study with a C3 mutation have familial aHUS. Sporadic aHUS was seen in all four patients with MCP mutation and all five patients with αFH and ∆CFHR1/3.

Onset

In ten patients (22%), aHUS onset was before 1 year of age, with the youngest patient being only 1 month old. In only one of these patients was a mutation found (C3/αFH), and only two patients had familial aHUS. The majority of aHUS patients (53%) presented between the age of 1 and 7 years, which is also the most common age for children with typical HUS to present with the disease, which suggests that age at onset cannot always help distinguish between typical and aHUS. In 38/45 patients aHUS onset followed a triggering event, such as gastrointestinal symptoms (74%), upper respiratory tract infection (45%), and fever (32%). A combination of triggering events was seen as well; for instance, vomiting and fever were seen in 8/45 patients. Diarrhea was seen in 11 patients, five of whom also had fever. One patient developed aHUS a few days after a hepatitis B vaccination, and one patient was positively tested for a Bordetella pertussis infection a few days before aHUS onset. Other triggers were infection with Haemophilus influenza (n = 1) and a streptococcal infection (n = 1).

Hypertension (blood pressure >95th percentile for age) was present at first presentation in 71% of patients. Six patients had involvement of the central nervous system due to malignant hypertension or cerebral infarction during their first aHUS flare. Two of these patients had a mutation (C3 and CFB) and one patient had αFH with ∆CFHR1/3. These three patients had severe seizures; the other three patients were extremely agitated or had reduced consciousness. One patient had additional visual handicap, and one showed apraxia and aphasia. Pancreas involvement during the first episode was seen in only two patients, both without a genetic defect. In 18 of the 37 patients (49%) for whom data were available, biochemical evaluation showed reduced C3 levels (minimum 210 mg/l, reference range 900–1,800 mg/l). Four of these patients had a mutation (2xCFB, 1xCFI, 1xC3), and four had αFH, of which three also had ∆CFHR1/3. Low C3 levels were always linked with high levels of the activation product C3d. However, we also found elevated levels of C3d in six patients with normal levels of C3. Of the 25 genetically undefined patients, 11 showed reduced C3 levels, and in seven, elevated levels of C3d were found, showing evidence of alternative pathway activation. Remarkably reduced C4 levels were seen in six of the 31 tested patients (19%), with an extreme lowest level of 30 mg/l (reference range 150–400 mg/l). A systemic disease, such as systemic lupus erythamatosis (SLE) or cryoglobulinemia as cause of these low C4 levels was ruled out because of the clinical and laboratory results combined with medical history. One of these patients had a CFH mutation.

Treatment and outcome of first episode

The majority of patients (60%) were treated with plasma therapy, including plasma infusion (PI) and/or plasma exchange (PE) (Table 2). Plasma therapy was applied in 12 patients with a genetic defect vs 15 patients without a known genetic anomaly. In 11 patients, plasma therapy was combined with dialysis. Nine patients were treated conservatively, three of whom had a genetic defect (1xC3, 1xMCP, 1xαFH with ∆CFHR1/3). In only 3/20 patients (15%) with a genetic defect (2xCFH, 1xMCP) was complete remission reached after the first episode, compared with 9/24 patients (38%) in the other group. One of these patients (CFH mutation) was treated with plasma therapy (four infusions with fresh frozen plasma), one with dialysis (CFH mutation), and one patient recovered spontaneously (mutation in MCP). All other patients with a genetic anomaly reached partial remission after the first flare. Of the nine patients without plasma therapy or dialysis, only three reached complete remission (1xMCP, 2xno genetic anomaly).

Chronic plasma therapy and/or dialysis was applied more often in the group with than in the group without a genetic defect (40% vs 30%). One patient died during the first aHUS episode due to consequences of the disease. This was the youngest patient in the study, only 1 month old. A genetic defect in complement proteins was not found in this patient.

Long-term outcome

Almost half of the aHUS patients (n = 21) had a relapse (Table 3). In the group with a genetic anomaly, 13/20 (65%) of patients relapsed. In the group without known anomalies, relapse occurred in only 8/25 (32%) patients. A total of 43 relapses was seen, of which 29 (67%) occurred in patients with any of the genetic subtypes. A maximum of five relapses was seen in one patient with αFH and ∆CFHR1/3. Of all patients with a relapse, 38% had familial aHUS. Most relapses occurred after a viral infection, usually of the upper respiratory tract. Time between aHUS onset and the first relapse varied widely, from 1 month after remission to a maximum of 8.5 years. In 9/21 patients, aHUS relapsed within 1 year, five had a genetic defect (1xCFH, 1xMCP, 1xC3/CFI, and 2xαFH with ∆CFHR1/3). Ten patients with a relapse were initially treated with plasma therapy, eight of whom received chronic plasma therapy. In most patients, plasma therapy was intensified during the relapse.

In 54% of patients, chronic hypertension was seen after the first flare; in 47%, proteinuria sustained. Most of these patients had to be treated for several months with antihypertensive agents. In four patients, neurological involvement was seen later during the course of disease. Two of these patients presented with seizures due to malignant hypertension (MCP and C3/CFI); one patient without a genetic defect had reduced consciousness [computed tomography (CT) scan showed no abnormalities], and one patient had dysphasia and sensibility disorders due to an arteria cerebralis media stenosis (CFH). Another patient developed necrotizing pancreatitis with transient diabetes mellitus 10 years after first presentation, for which a partial pancreatectomy was performed. No mutation or deletion was found in this patient.

Seven patients (2xCFH, 1xMCP, 1xC3/CFI, and three without a known genetic defect) received a total number of 13 renal transplants, but in 10/13 grafts, aHUS recurred. Three of these patients had familial aHUS. No recurrence was seen in patient with MCP mutation. Time between transplantation and first relapse in renal graft patients varied between 6 days and 4 years. Additionally, one graft was lost due to arteria renalis thrombosis 1 day after transplantation; one graft was lost due to rejection after 4 years. One patient died during the acute phase of aHUS. Three other patients died later during the course of disease. One patient with no genetic defect died 9 years after onset because of massive cerebral bleeding due to malignant hypertension. Another patient with an MCP mutation, who had no recurrence of aHUS in the renal transplant, developed pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD), which led eventually to the finding of an inborn error of cobalamin metabolism, and he died 7.5 years after his first presentation [21]. The last patient died 12 years after aHUS onset but not due to the consequences of aHUS.

Discussion

In this study, we found that in 45 children diagnosed with aHUS, genetic disorders in complement-regulating genes encoding CFH, CFI, MCP, CFB, C3, and THBD, as well as the presence of αFH with or without a homozygous deletion in CFHR1/3, are linked with clinical presentation, treatment, and outcome. In almost 50% of this pediatric aHUS cohort, a genetic defect in complement-regulating genes was found. This finding is compatible with the previous French pediatric report of Sellier-Leclerc et al. and the Italian adult/pediatric registry reported by Noris et al. [3, 6]. Most mutations (overall 13%) were found in CFH, which corresponds to the literature [3, 5, 6, 9]. The number of mutations in MCP and C3 were equal (overall 9%). Fewer mutations (overall 7%) were found in CFI, just as seen in the pediatric French cohort. Mutations in CFB are relatively rare [6, 9] and according to the literature occur in only 1–2% of patients with aHUS [2]. We identified a genetic aberration in CFB in 4.4% of our patients, but it must be mentioned that these two patients were related. Delvaeye et al. report that about 5% of patients with aHUS have mutations that impair thrombomodulin function [6, 19]. Remarkably, in our cohort, no aHUS-associated thrombomodulin mutations were found.

Dragon-Durey et al. were the first to describe the association between αFH and aHUS [15], and more recently an association between the presence of αFH and a homozygous polymorphic deletion in CFHR1/3 was described [17]. In our population, 13% of all patients had αFH, and 83% of these patients (overall 11%) had an additional ∆CFHR1/3, which corresponds well to previous published data [1518].

One of the most important observations in this cohort is that 74% of aHUS patients showed gastrointestinal symptoms, of which 25% presented with diarrhea. This clearly shows that postdiarrheal onset does not exclude the possibility of aHUS. This makes differentiating between typical HUS and aHUS for the general pediatrician sometimes even more difficult and may even result in a delay of adequate treatment in these patients. Also, relapses seem to occur most often after a triggering event, usually an upper airway infection or gastroenteritis. Remarkably, in one patient, aHUS relapsed twice after a cytomegalovirus infection for which daily PE and ganciclovir were initiated [22]. In one other patient, aHUS onset followed a hepatitis B vaccination a few days earlier. The triggering role of vaccination in this patient was confirmed by a relapse shortly after combined anti-diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus-polio vaccination.

In only 18 of the 37 tested patients (49%) were C3 plasma levels reduced, which indicates, as shown by others, that normal C3 levels in aHUS patients do not reflect complement activation on the endothelial cell surfaces. Normal C3 levels also do not rule out the existence of mutations in genes encoding complement-regulating proteins. Breakdown products of C3 activation, such as C3d, as well as soluble complement complex C5b-9 (SC5b-9), might be a better serum marker for complement activation in aHUS patients.

Although at this time results of the use of eculizumab in patients with aHUS look very promising [23, 24] and might replace plasma therapy in the near future, at present, plasma therapy is considered the gold standard treatment in patients with aHUS and should be started within 24 h of diagnosis [25]. However, only 60% of our population received plasma therapy (with or without dialysis). This is due to the fact that in our study, patients were included at the time their DNA was sent to the laboratory between 2001 and 2010, a time when knowledge about aHUS treatment was growing. However, those patients’ first or even second HUS episode was sometimes long before that period, when no clear therapy schedules were available. Of the patients treated without plasma therapy, 44% were diagnosed and already treated before 2000. Only in recent years have new treatment guidelines for aHUS been published [25]. Since the latest guideline in 2008, every patient in this study was treated with plasma therapy.

In our cohort, seven patients received a total number of 13 kidney transplants. In five of these seven patients, transplantation was performed before the existence of genetic complement mutations was known and before plasmapheresis as treatment of aHUS was well accepted. Four of these patients had a genetic defect (1xMCP, 2xCFH, and 1xCFI/C3). All except one (MCP) graft failed (93%), again demonstrating that kidney transplantation is compromised by the risk of recurrence [2, 3, 5, 6, 26, 27]. Renal transplantation in patients with aHUS should not be performed without DNA analysis for all involved complement genes due to the fact that this leads to a better defined risk profile for relapses.

Currently, aHUS patients having a CFH or CFI mutation who will have a single kidney transplantation are advised to combine this with prophylactic plasmapheresis and life-long PE [28], or else these patients are advised to have a combined liver–kidney transplantation with preoperative PE, intraoperative PI, and posttransplant anticoagulation [27]. In the near future, one might expect that lifelong prophylactic treatment with complement inhibitors will replace the use of plasma and /or the combination of plasma with liver and/or renal transplantation in aHUS patients with CFH or CFI mutations [23, 24].

In conclusion, in almost 50% of pediatric aHUS patients, a genetic abnormality was found. In 87% of patients, aHUS onset followed a triggering event; 25% of cases presented with diarrhea, which makes differentiating between typical and aHUS difficult. Half of the patients (21/43) had a relapse (67% of them with a genetic anomaly), and all except one renal graft failed, so renal transplantation should not be performed before adequate DNA analysis of the involved complement genes. In the near future, next-generation sequencing methods, such as whole exome or genome sequencing, will more easily facilitate DNA mutation analysis, and new genes will probably be identified that might be associated with aHUS as well. With the use of complement inhibitors in the ongoing trials in aHUS patients, a new era in the treatment of patients with aHUS has begun. It has yet to be demonstrated whether this treatment will improve the overall results in aHUS patients and hopefully reduce the requirement for dialysis and renal transplantations.