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Acquired Cystic Kidney Disease. Alicia Notkin February 26, 2008. History. First described in 1847 by John Simon in patients with subacute glomerulonephritis (Bright’s disease) Re-described in 1977 by Dunnill in a study of kidneys from autopsies performed on ESRD patients on dialysis
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Acquired Cystic Kidney Disease Alicia Notkin February 26, 2008
History • First described in 1847 by John Simon in patients with subacute glomerulonephritis (Bright’s disease) • Re-described in 1977 by Dunnill in a study of kidneys from autopsies performed on ESRD patients on dialysis • Has been reported in association with all causes of renal disease (except hereditary cystic disease – b/c of the difficulty in distinguishing the two)
Features of acquired cystic kidney disease • Multiple • Bilateral • Usually < 0.5 cm • “Positive” u/s or CT: both kidneys w/ >/= 4 cysts
Features of acquired cystic kidney disease • No FH ADPKD, small/normal sized kidneys, smooth contour, cysts are only in the kidney • Increased incidence w/ increasing time on dialysis; ~ 35-50% of dialysis patients overall • Men and blacks are at much higher risk
Pathogenesis • Cyst fluid composition resembles that of plasma (thought to derive minimally from glomerular filtrate & primarily from transepithelial solute & fluid secretion) • A brush border is present on the luminal membrane of the cysts • Above suggest that cysts arise from proliferation of proximal tubular epithelial cells
Pathogenesis: proposed progression to adenocarcinoma (Grantham 1991)
Pathogenesis (cont.) • Aldosterone & hypokalemia seem to stimulate tubular cell proliferation, & adenoma resection in humans has been shown to result in cyst regression • Renal transplantation may stabilization or regression of cysts by restoring normal renal function & biochemical milieu • However, cyclosporine actually ACKD by: inducing TGF-β expression, suppressing tumor surveillance, & possibly by its ischemic effects on the native kidneys
Pathogenesis (cont.) • In vivo, rats w/ normal kidneys given diphenylamine, diphenylthiazole, or nordihydroguaiacetic acid develop cysts – renal epithelium is damaged followed by focal tubule dilatation & expansion • The cyst formation from diphenylthiazole can be reversed by stopping the drug • The cyst formation from nordihydroguaiacetic acid is significantly enhanced by exposure of the animals to endotoxins or enteric microbes, suggesting the role of secondary factors in cyst development
Pathogenesis (cont.) • Five-sixths nephrectomy w/ azotemia provides a milieu for cyst development in remaining parenchyma • This cyst formation can be enhanced by feeding the animals a high protein diet
Pathogenesis (cont.) • In vitro: Normal Human Kidney (NHK) epithelial cells are a good model of cyst development in ACKD • Cyst formation depends on epidermal growth factor (EGF) & insulin • Adenylate cyclase stimulants induction & growth of cysts
Pathogenesis (cont.) • In vitro: hydrocortisone promotes cyst formation, possibly by increasing the activity of Na+/K+-ATPase • Cysts develop in the proximal tubule • Cyst regress when hydrocortisone is removed from medium • As there is no glomerular filtration occurring, fluid is accumulating only by secretion across the tubular wall
Pathogenesis (cont.) • The notion of renal cysts as benign tumors filled w/ fluid comes from studies of Madin-Darby Canine Kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells (which actually more accurately reflect hereditary cystic disease rather than acquired cystic disease) • Medium alone: no proliferation or cysts • Add cAMP agonist (results in cell proliferation & fluid secretion) cyst formation • Add EGF balls of cells • Addition of low concentration ouabain (blocks Na+/K+-ATPase) to these cells blocks fluid secretion & therefore cyst enlargement, but does not inhibit proliferation, resulting in a dissociation of fluid transport & cell proliferation, ie. a cellular mass instead of a cyst
Complications • Hematuria +/- pain (or overt hemorrhage) • Increase in number & size of cysts over time • Cyst infection • Erythrocytosis • Renal cell carcinoma: ~ ½ of the time are multiple & bilateral
Renal cell carcinoma risk factors • Smoking: ~ 2x risk • Occupational exposure to cadmium, asbestos, & trichloroethylene: ~ 1-2x risk • Obesity • Acquired cystic renal disease: ~ 30x risk??? • Analgesic abuse nephropathy • Genetic factors • ? Hypertension, prior radiation, sickle cell disease
Renal cell carcinoma in ESRD • Usually develops after 8-10 years of dialysis • Occurs in ~ 6% of dialysis patients • M:F ratio of ~ 7:1 • Larger cysts that supranormal kidney size increased risk of transformation (kidneys weighing > 150g are 6x more likely to contain carcinoma than smaller size kidneys) • Clear cell RCC is much less common as is its associated chromosome 3p deletions • Seems to have lower metastatic potential • May not always be related to acquired cystic disease
Renal cancer in ACKD compared to the general population (Marple 1994)
ACKD-associated RCC • Serum hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) increases as renal failure progresses • HGF is also higher in patients who have been on dialysis for a longer time • HGF mRNA & protein, along w/ c-met protein have been shown to be upregulated in non-tumor & tumor regions in ACKD patients w/ RCC
ACKD-associated RCC • C-Jun is activated in atypical hyperplastic proliferative cells in ACKD & is thought to play a role in RCC carcinogenesis • Bcl-2 overexpression may also have a role in tumor development • Nadasdy, in 1995, characterized the proliferative activity of cyst epithelia in ACKD (& ADPKD & ARPKD) as high, & suggested that these cysts may be RCC precursors
Bosniak classification of renal cysts • Classifies renal cysts into one of five categories based on morphology & enhancement on CT scan • Designation helps w/ diagnosis & management of the cysts
Screening for RCC • ? Screen dialysis patients for acquired cystic kidney disease • ? If one decides to screen, should one use contrast CT or u/s • One recommendation: screen w/ u/s, & if positive for cysts, screen yearly w/ contrast CT (particularly if patient has very large cysts) • Another recommendation: only do radiographic screening if patient has new hematuria or flank pain or has been on dialysis for a long time or has large kidneys from acquired cystic kidney disease • Somewhere in between? – screen patients who have been on dialysis for 3-5 years
Screening for RCC • Probably want to screen on an individual basis • Similarly to screening for other malignancies, like colon or breast cancer, should probably consider comorbidities/overall life expectancy of the individual patient
References • Chertow, GM et al. Cost-effectiveness of cancer screening in end-stage renal disease. Arch Intern Med 1996; 156:1345.Denton, MD et al. Prevalence of renal cell carcinoma in patients with ESRD pre-transplantation: A pathologic analysis. Kidney Int 2002; 61:2201. • Farivar-Mohseni, H et al. Renal cell carcinoma and end stage renal disease. J Urol 2006; 175:2018. • Fick, GM et al. Hereditary and acquired cystic disease of the kidney. Kidney Int 1994; 46:951. • Grantham, JJ. Acquired cystic kidney disease. Kidney Int 1991; 40:143. • Hughson, MD et al. Renal cell carcinoma of end-stage renal disease: A histopathologic and molecular genetic study. J Am Soc Nephrol 1996; 7:2461. • Ishikawa, I et al. Renal cell carcinoma detected by screening shows better patient survival than that detected following symptoms in dialysis patients. Ther Apher Dial 2004; 8:468. • Ishikawa, I et al. Ten-year prospective study on the development of renal cell carcinoma in dialysis patients. Am J Kidney Dis 1990; 16:452. • Israel, GM et al. An update of the Bosniak renal cyst classification system. Urology 2005; 66:484. • Konda, R et al. Expression of hepatocyte growth factor and its receptor C-met in acquired renal cystic disease associated with renal cell carcinoma. J Urol 2004; 171:2166. • LeBrun, CJ et al. Life expectancy benefits of cancer screening in the end-stage renal disease population. Am J Kidney Dis 2000; 35:237. • Levine, E et al. Natural history of acquired renal cystic disease in dialysis patients: A prospective longitudinal CT study. Am J Roentgenol 1991; 156:501. • Lien, YH et al. Association of cyclosporin A with acquired cystic kidney disease of the native kidneys in transplant recipients. Kidney Int 1991; 44:613. • MacDougall, ML et al. Predication of carcinoma in acquired cystic disease as a function of kidney weight. J Am Soc Nephrol 1990; 1:828. • Marple, JT et al. Renal cancer complicating acquired cystic kidney disease. J Am Soc Nephrol 1994; 4:1951. • Nadasdy, T et al. Proliferative activity of cyst epithelium in human renal cystic diseases. J Am Soc Nephrol 1995; 5:1462. • Sarasin, FP et al. Screening for acquired cystic kidney disease: A decision analytic perspective. Kidney Int 1995; 48:207. • Truong, LD et al. Renal neoplasm in acquired cystic kidney disease. Am J Kidney Dis 1995; 26:1.