Mycophenolate Mofetil Versus Prednisone for Induction Therapy in Steroid-Sensitive Idiopathic Nephrotic Syndrome in Children: An Observational Study
Alexandra Mazo, Stella Kilduff, Tanya Pereira, Sonia Solomon, Robin Matloff, Anna Zolotnitskaya, Dmitry Samsonov

TL;DR
The study compares mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) to steroids for treating children with nephrotic syndrome, finding similar long-term outcomes but more short-term relapses with MMF.
Contribution
This observational study explores MMF as a steroid-sparing alternative for nephrotic syndrome in children, showing noninferiority in long-term remission.
Findings
MMF group had a higher relapse rate during induction (30%) compared to steroids (3%).
By 12 months, relapse rates and relapse-free intervals were similar between MMF and steroid groups.
No serious side effects were observed in either group.
Abstract
High-dose steroids are recommended for the induction of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. The aim of this study was to compare standard induction therapy with Mycophenolate Mofetil (MMF). We hypothesized that MMF could be noninferior to steroids in maintaining steroid-induced remission. The second aim was to reduce steroid-induced side effects. This was an observational study. Patients 2-11 years with first episode of nephrotic syndrome who entered remission within 2 weeks of standard steroid treatment were eligible for enrollment. Patients in the experimental group completed 12-week induction with MMF, whereas the control group continued a standard 12-week steroid protocol. MMF and prednisolone were used in the study. The primary study outcomes were relapse rate and relapse-free interval during a 52-week follow-up. Descriptive statistics were used for analysis. Ten of 41 eligible…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRenal Diseases and Glomerulopathies · Vasculitis and related conditions · Coagulation, Bradykinin, Polyphosphates, and Angioedema
