Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
Renal Diseases
Relationship between Serum IgA/C3 Ratio and Progression of IgA Nephropathy
Hiroyuki KOMATSUShouichi FUJIMOTOSeiichiro HARAYuji SATOKazuhiro YAMADATanenao ETO
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

2004 Volume 43 Issue 11 Pages 1023-1028

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Abstract

  Objective  The serum IgA/C3 ratio might be considered to serve as a diagnostic marker for patients with IgA nephropathy (IgAN), but its value as a marker of the severity of histological lesions or prognosis is unknown.
  Methods  We studied the serum IgA/C3 ratio, using standardized reference material, in 86 patients with IgAN and in 32 with non-IgAN. The patients with IgAN were divided according to the severity of histological lesions (mild IgAN, n=29 and severe IgAN, n=57) based on Japanese clinical guidelines.
  Results  The serum IgA level was significantly higher, while its C3 level was lower in patients with severe IgAN compared to those with non-IgAN. However, these levels were not different between patients with mild IgAN and non-IgAN. In contrast, the serum IgA/C3 ratio obviously differed among the three groups (2.47±0.96 vs. 3.63±1.44 vs. 4.72±1.86; p<0.01, ANOVA). Kaplan-Meier analysis of the patients with IgAN classified according to the mean serum IgA/C3 ratio revealed that the group with high serum IgA/C3 (4.5 and above) had a significantly poorer renal outcome (p<0.05, log-rank test), since the cumulative renal survival rate at 5 years was 84.4% vs. 100%. The ratio (%) of patients with severe IgAN in whom hematuria disappeared, was significantly higher in the low, than in the high serum IgA/C3 group (41.9% vs. 15.4%; p<0.05, t-test).
  Conclusion  The serum IgA/C3 ratio appears to reflect the histological severity of IgAN and could serve as a marker of the progression of IgAN.

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© 2004 by The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
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