# Temporal changes of the life and renal prognoses of patients with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis in Japan, 1989–2019

**Authors:** Kentaro Nakajima, Shuzo Kaneko, Joichi Usui, Naotake Tsuboi, Hitoshi Sugiyama, Shoichi Maruyama, Yoshitaka Isaka, Ichiei Narita, Kunihiro Yamagata

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10157-025-02643-6 · 2025-03-25

## TL;DR

This study shows that life and kidney survival for a severe kidney disease in Japan has improved over time, even as patients are getting older when diagnosed.

## Contribution

The study provides updated long-term survival data for RPGN patients in Japan and evaluates the impact of treatment changes over 30 years.

## Key findings

- Cumulative 24-month life survival improved from 72.0% in 1989–1998 to 83.5% in 2016–2019.
- Renal survival showed a favorable trend, reaching 78.4% in the most recent period.
- Rituximab and cyclophosphamide had similar outcomes, with better renal prognosis in severe cases when either was used.

## Abstract

This study is a continuation of the Japan Rapidly Progressive GlomeruloNephritis (RPGN) Working Group’s chronological nationwide survey.

We analyzed 1,660 RPGN cases from 2016–2019 and compared them to 4,179 cases from five earlier periods (1989–1998, 1999–2001, 2002–2008, 2009–2011, 2012–2015). Data on causative diseases, clinical severity, 24-month life and renal survival, and treatment details were collected and compared.

The most recent cohort showed an older median age at onset (median age 74 years), with improved serum creatinine levels (median 2.5 mg/dL). Cumulative survival at 24 months remained stable (periods 1989–1998, 1999–2001, 2002–2008, 2009–2011, 2012–2015, 2016–2019 were each 72.0%, 72.9%, 77.7%, 83.0%, 84.9%, 83.5%, p < 0.01), while renal survival showed a favorable trend in the most recent periods (there were each 68.7%, 75.4%, 76.7%, 73.4%, 78.2%, 78.4%, p < 0.01). Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis (AAV)-RPGN had similar outcomes to the overall cohort. Increased rituximab use was observed, with no significant differences in life and renal prognosis between rituximab (RIX) and cyclophosphamide (CY). In severe renal impairment (Cre ≥ 6), renal prognosis was better in the CY or RIX use group than in the non-use group (p = 0.035, 0.025). Anti-glomerular basement membrane disease had a poorer renal prognosis compared to other causes.

Despite an increasingly older age of onset, both life and renal prognoses for new-onset AAV-RPGN from 2016 to 2019 remain comparable to the best in previous surveys, due to the impact of constant improvements in early diagnosis and changes in treatment.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10157-025-02643-6.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** cyclophosphamide (PubChem CID 2907)
- **Diseases:** rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (MONDO:0017236), anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis (MONDO:0015492), anti-glomerular basement membrane disease (MONDO:0009303)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Anti-glomerular basement membrane disease (MESH:D019867), Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis (MESH:D056648), AAV (MESH:D014657), GlomeruloNephritis (MESH:D005921), renal impairment (MESH:D007674), AAV-RPGN (MESH:C538458)
- **Chemicals:** creatinine (MESH:D003404), CY (MESH:D003520), RIX (MESH:D000069283)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12204914/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12204914