Is Childhood IgA Nephropathy Different From Adult IgA Nephropathy? A Narrative Review
Areefa Alladin-Karan, Susan M. Samuel, Andrew W. Wade, Pietro Ravani, Silviu Grisaru, Ngan N. Lam, Kathryn A. Bernie, Robert R. Quinn

TL;DR
This review compares childhood and adult IgA nephropathy, highlighting differences in symptoms, treatment, and outcomes that suggest the need for distinct management strategies.
Contribution
The paper identifies unique clinical and pathological features of childhood IgA nephropathy that may require separate treatment approaches and guidelines.
Findings
Children with IgA nephropathy present more frequently with gross hematuria and nephrotic syndrome compared to adults.
Children have more inflammatory kidney lesions and better kidney function at diagnosis than adults.
Children are more likely to receive immunosuppressive therapy sooner than adults.
Abstract
Immunoglobulin A (IgA) nephropathy (IgAN) is the most common primary glomerular kidney disease. Children and adults are presumed to have the same disease and are treated similarly. However, there are differences between childhood IgAN and adult IgAN that may require unique treatment considerations, even after transition to adult nephrology services. A narrative review was conducted to compare childhood and adult IgAN and to describe the distinct characteristics of childhood IgAN. Reframing childhood IgAN can inform guideline recommendations unique to childhood IgAN, the development of targeted therapies, and clinical trial design. Medline and Embase were searched for reports on children and adults with IgAN published between January 2013 and December 2023 (updated May 2024). The search was not restricted by age group, outcomes reported, language, or study design. Randomized controlled…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRenal Diseases and Glomerulopathies · Chronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes · Autoimmune Bullous Skin Diseases
