prognosis
Last reviewed 01/2018
The prognoses for patients with two common causes of the nephrotic syndrome are as follows:
- minimal change disease (MCD):
- a third have just one episode
- a third have infrequent relapses
- a third have frequent relapses throughout childhood which abate during adulthood; life expectancy is normal
- focal segmental glomerulosclerosis:
- a third remit after a prolonged course
- a third have continuing haematuria and proteinuria but have normal renal function
- a third progress to end stage renal failure
In adults:
- untreated MCD is associated with a risk of mortality due to infection and thromboembolism
- limited data suggest that the rate of spontaneous early remission (eg, within a few months) in adults is approximately 5 to 10 percent
- a substantial proportion of untreated patients eventually undergo remission
after a prolonged period
- only available randomized controlled trial that, in 1970, compared
prednisone versus no specific therapy and included 31 patients with MCD
- remission of proteinuria to less than 1 g/day in the control group occurred in 50 percent by 18 months and approximately 70 percent at three years
- suuggests that the chief benefit of glucocorticoid is to induce and maintain remission until the poorly understood process responsible for MCD abates.
- only available randomized controlled trial that, in 1970, compared
prednisone versus no specific therapy and included 31 patients with MCD
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