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Rescue of renal function in a 3-year-old girl with Goodpasture's syndrome with a brief review of literature.

NDT Plus 2010 October
Goodpasture's syndrome has been documented in only a handful of children under the age of four. We describe a 3-year-old girl presenting with anaemia and renal failure whose kidney biopsy showed anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease. She was treated aggressively with pulse steroids, plasmapheresis and monthly infusions of cyclophosphamide. After months of aggressive immunosuppression, her renal function normalized, and her anti-GBM antibody disappeared. A year after the onset, she underwent a second kidney biopsy for persistent proteinuria and hypertension that surprisingly showed focal sclerosing glomerulonephritis, an unreported finding at this age. The biopsy showed deposition of antibody on the GBM despite the fact that anti-GBM antibody had normalized in the serum 5 months earlier. Mycophenolate mofetil was added to the immunosuppression at that point. At her 3-year follow-up, creatinine clearance was 88.4 mL/min/1.73 m(2), proteinuria was 408 mg/day and blood pressure was controlled with enalapril 0.2 mg/kg/day. She has not had a relapse or abnormal anti-GBM antibody for 30 months, but her renal prognosis remains guarded. To our knowledge, this is the youngest patient to have a successful rescue of renal function after isolated Goodpasture's syndrome.

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