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Experts create
classification system for leading cause of
Kidney Failure
Newswise — An
international group of medical experts has
crafted a much-needed classification system
for diabetic nephropathy, the leading cause
of total kidney failure, according to a
study appearing in an upcoming issue of the
Journal of the American Society Nephrology (JASN).
The effort should improve communication
among health professionals, help researchers
design better clinical studies, and guide
patient care.
Current estimates suggest
that 285 million people worldwide will live
with diabetes in 2010 and that the incidence
of diabetes will continue to rise. As a
result, the incidence of diabetic
nephropathy, or kidney damage that arises as
a complication of diabetes, will likely
increase as well.
Diabetic nephropathy is a
complex condition with varying degrees of
severity and varying effects on the kidneys.
While researchers do not
fully understand the mechanisms involved in
the development and progression of diabetic
nephropathy, they know that too much blood
sugar in diabetic patients can damage the
clusters of tiny blood vessels in the
kidneys that help remove waste from the
body. Eventually, the kidney structures
begin to leak and kidney failure ensues.
Unlike other kidney
conditions, diabetic nephropathy has no
standard classification system. Recently,
however, a unique cooperative effort among
groups of experts from 16 universities
spread over seven countries in three
continents developed a uniform international
classification system that reflects the
current understanding of the various forms
of diabetic nephropathy.
Jan Anthonie Bruijn, MD,
PhD (Leiden University Medical Center, the
Netherlands), who led the effort, hopes that
the classification system will standardize
definitions of different classes of diabetic
nephropathy and encourage uniform and
reproducible reporting of cases among
different medical centers.
The new classification
system categorizes diabetic nephropathy by
varying degrees of severity that will be
easy to discern in the clinic.
The experts divided the
condition into four progressive classes,
with the first class being the mildest and
the fourth class being the most severe.
The system may help guide
clinicians as they treat affected patients.
In addition, it could aid researchers as
they continue to search for the mechanisms
involved in the development and progression
of diabetic nephropathy.
The classification effort
was commissioned by the Research Committee
of the nonprofit Renal Pathology Society.
Study co-authors include Thijs Cohen-Tervaert,
MD, Antien Mooyaart, PhD, Emile de Heer,
PhD, Ingeborg Bajema, MD, PhD (Leiden
University Medical Center, the Netherlands);
Kerstin Amann, MD (University of Erlangen-Nuernberg,
in Erlangen, Germany); Arthur Cohen, MD,
Mark Haas, MD, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center); H. Terence Cook, MD (Hammersmith
Hospital, in London, UK); Cinthia
Drachenberg, MD (University of Maryland ,
Baltimore); Franco Ferrario, MD (San Carlo
Borromeo Hospital, in Italy); Agnes Fogo, MD
(Vanderbilt University Medical Center);
Kensuke Joh, MD (Sendai-Shaho Hospital, in
Sendai-city, Japan) Laure Noël, MD (Hôpital
Necker, Université René Descartes, in Paris,
France); Jai Radhakrishnan, MD (Columbia
University); and Surya Seshan, MD (Weill
Cornell Medical College).
Disclosures: The authors
reported no financial disclosures.
The article, entitled
“Pathologic Classification of Diabetic
Nephropathy,” will appear online at http://jasn.asnjournals.org/
on February 18, 2010, doi
10.1681/ASN.2010010010 .
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Nephrology (ASN) does not offer medical
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for informational purposes only, and is not
intended to cover all possible uses,
directions, precautions, drug interactions,
or adverse effects.
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doctor for all medical emergencies.
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