Microscopic hematuria in IgA nephropathy: a biomarker of disease activity
Jürgen Floege, Fernando C Fervenza, Rosanna Coppo

TL;DR
This paper reviews how microscopic hematuria in IgA nephropathy can serve as a useful biomarker for disease activity and prognosis.
Contribution
The paper highlights the underutilized potential of microscopic hematuria as a biomarker in IgA nephropathy and advocates for its proper assessment.
Findings
Microscopic hematuria is linked to active inflammation and worse outcomes in IgA nephropathy.
Current diagnostic approaches may overlook the importance of hematuria in assessing disease activity.
Proper evaluation of hematuria could improve risk stratification and treatment monitoring in IgA nephropathy.
Abstract
Immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN) is an immune-mediated disease of B-cell origin and the most common primary glomerulonephritis worldwide, which often progresses to kidney failure within 10–20 years of diagnosis. Microscopic hematuria is frequently observed in IgAN; it is thought to result from damage to the glomerular filtration barrier caused by pathogenic immune complex deposits, allowing red blood cells to leak into the urinary space. Emerging evidence suggests that microscopic hematuria in IgAN may be linked to active glomerular inflammation, poorer disease prognosis and progressive kidney function decline. Despite this, it remains an underutilized biomarker for IgAN because of a lack of standardization (which can lead to preanalytical errors), challenging logistical considerations in large multicenter trials and non-glomerular hematuria as a confounding factor. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRenal Diseases and Glomerulopathies · Chronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes · Bladder and Urothelial Cancer Treatments
