Randomized Trial of Plasma Exchange or High-Dosage Methylprednisolone as Adjunctive Therapy for Severe Renal Vasculitis
David R.W. Jayne*,
Gill Gaskin,
Niels Rasmussen,
Daniel Abramowicz,
Franco Ferrario||,
Loic Guillevin¶,
Eduardo Mirapeix**,
Caroline O.S. Savage,
Renato A. Sinico||,
Coen A. Stegeman,
Kerstin W. Westman,
Fokko J. van der Woude||||,
Robert A.F. de Lind van Wijngaarden¶¶,
Charles D. Pusey on behalf of the European Vasculitis Study Group
* Department of Medicine, Addenbrooke's, Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom; Renal Section, Division of Medicine, Imperial College, London, United Kingdom; Department of Otolaryngology, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Immunology, Free University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium; || Renal Immunopathology Centre, Ospedale San Carlo Borromeo, Milan, Italy; ¶ Hôpital Cochin, Paris, France; ** Hospital Clinic i Provincial, Barcelona, Spain; Department of Nephrology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom; Department of Nephrology, University Medical Center Groningen and University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands; Department of Nephrology and Transplantation, University Hospital of Malmö, Malmö, Sweden; |||| Department of Nephrology, University of Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany; and ¶¶ Department of Pathology, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, Netherlands
Correspondence: Dr. David Jayne, Box 118, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2QQ, UK. Phone: +44-1223-217259; Fax: +44-1223-586506; dj106{at}cam.ac.uk
Received for publication January 23, 2007.
Accepted for publication April 25, 2007.
Systemic vasculitis associated with autoantibodies to neutrophilcytoplasmic antigens (ANCA) is the most frequent cause of rapidlyprogressive glomerulonephritis. Renal failure at presentationcarries an increased risk for ESRD and death despite immunosuppressivetherapy. This study investigated whether the addition of plasmaexchange was more effective than intravenous methylprednisolonein the achievement of renal recovery in those who presentedwith a serum creatinine >500 µmol/L (5.8 mg/dl). Atotal of 137 patients with a new diagnosis of ANCA-associatedsystemic vasculitis confirmed by renal biopsy and serum creatinine>500 µmol/L (5.8 mg/dl) were randomly assigned to receiveseven plasma exchanges (n = 70) or 3000 mg of intravenous methylprednisolone(n = 67). Both groups received oral cyclophosphamide and oralprednisolone. The primary end point was dialysis independenceat 3 mo. Secondary end points included renal and patient survivalat 1 yr and severe adverse event rates. At 3 mo, 33 (49%) of67 after intravenous methylprednisolone compared with 48 (69%)or 70 after plasma exchange were alive and independent of dialysis(95% confidence interval for the difference 18 to 35%; P = 0.02).As compared with intravenous methylprednisolone, plasma exchangewas associated with a reduction in risk for progression to ESRDof 24% (95% confidence interval 6.1 to 41%), from 43 to 19%,at 12 mo. Patient survival and severe adverse event rates at1 yr were 51 (76%) of 67 and 32 of 67 (48%) in the intravenousmethylprednisolone group and 51 (73%) of 70 and 35 of (50%)70 in the plasma exchange group, respectively. Plasma exchangeincreased the rate of renal recovery in ANCA-associated systemicvasculitis that presented with renal failure when compared withintravenous methylprednisolone. Patient survival and severeadverse event rates were similar in both groups.
Wegener's granulomatosis and microscopic polyangiitis are primarysystemic vasculitic disorders that are closely associated withcirculating autoantibodies to neutrophil cytoplasmic antigens(ANCA) with specificity for proteinase 3 (PR3) or myeloperoxidase(MPO).1, 2 Kidney involvement occurs in 70% of patients withhistologic features of an intense, neutrophil-predominant inflammatoryinfiltrate; segmental glomerular necrosis reflecting a glomerularcapillaritis; and intraglomerular monocyte proliferation contributingto a pauci-immune, focal and necrotizing, crescentic glomerulonephritis.3Vasculitis accounts for 80% of cases of rapidly progressiveglomerulonephritis, and progression to end-stage renal failurecan be prevented by steroid and immunosuppressive therapy.4–7
A role for ANCA in the pathogenesis of renal vasculitis is supportedby the induction of neutrophil activation and superoxide releaseand neutrophil-mediated endothelial cytotoxicity by ANCA invitro,8 by the induction of crescentic glomerulonephritis inanimal studies by ANCA,9, 10 and by the close association ofANCA with pauci-immune renal vasculitis.6, 11, 12
Combination therapy with cyclophosphamide and prednisolone leadsto remission in 80 to 90% of patients.12 However, those whopresent with advanced renal failure have poorer outcomes, withonly 50% surviving with independent renal function at 1 yr.5The addition of intravenous methylprednisolone or plasma exchangehas been advocated for those with severe vasculitic presentations.13Plasma exchange was introduced for the removal of anti–glomerularbasement membrane (GBM) antibodies in Goodpasture disease andused subsequently in crescentic glomerulonephritis without anti-GBMantibodies.14–16 A randomized trial in the latter groupfound improved outcomes with plasma exchange in those with severerenal failure at presentation.15 After the discovery of ANCAin the sera of patients with vasculitis and evidence supportingthe pathogenicity of ANCA, a rationale has emerged for earlyplasma exchange to reduce levels of circulating ANCA and contributeto disease control in vasculitis.
The European Vasculitis Study Group has defined a "severe renal"subgroup as being patients who present with a serum creatinine>500 µmol/L (5.8 mg/dl) attributable to active vasculitis.17This study compared the addition of either intravenous methylprednisoloneor plasma exchange with cyclophosphamide and oral prednisolonein severe renal vasculitis, with renal recovery as the primaryoutcome measure.
A total of 151 patients were screened between March 1995 andOctober 2002; nine were excluded for noneligibility (circulatinganti-GBM antibodies, n = 8; and >500 mg intravenous methylprednisolone,n = 1), four declined further participation, and one centerwithdrew (n = 1; Figure 1). A total of 137 patients were randomlyassigned to receive intravenous methylprednisolone (n = 67)or plasma exchange (n = 70). There were no significant differencesin demographic, clinical, or laboratory features at the timeof randomization (Table 1). All cases had histologic confirmationof the diagnosis. Subsequent histologic review of 102 (75%)of 137 diagnostic biopsies found no differences in the frequencyor severity of histologic lesions between the two treatmentgroups (Table 2).
Renal Recovery
By 3 mo, renal recovery had occurred in 33 (49%) of 67 of theintravenous methylprednisolone group and 48 (69%) of 70 of theplasma exchange group (95% confidence interval [CI] for thedifference 18 to 35%; P = 0.02). Renal recovery had occurredby 6 wk in 66 and by 3 mo in 81 patients. At 12 mo, two fromeach group who had recovered renal function progressed to ESRD.Twenty-nine (43%) of 67 overall and 29 (57%) of 51 survivorsin the intravenous methylprednisolone group and 41 (59%) of70 overall and 41 (80%) of 51 survivors in the plasma exchangegroup remained alive and independent of dialysis (95% CI 4 to40%; P = 0.008; Figure 2A). The hazard ratio for ESRD over 12mo for plasma exchange versus intravenous methylprednisolonegroups was 0.47 (95% CI 0.24 to 0.91; P = 0.03). The risk reductionfor ESRD at 3 mo (23 [41%] of 56 for methylprednisolone versus11 [19%] of 59 for plasma exchange) was 22% (95% CI 6.2 to 39).The risk reduction for ESRD at 12 mo (22 [43%] of 51 for methylprednisoloneversus 10 [19%] of 51 for plasma exchange) was 24% (95% CI 6.1to 41). The association of renal recovery and treatment withplasma exchange remained in the multivariate analysis (P = 0.04),but renal recovery was not significantly associated with stratification,age, diagnosis, or ANCA subtype.
Figure 2. (A) Proportion of patients in each group without progression to ESRD. ESRD required at least 6 wk of dialysis dependence (intravenous methylprednisolone group [MP] versus plasma exchange group [PE] P = 0.008). (B) Proportion of patients in each group who survived during the trial (MP versus plasma exchange group P = 0.68). (C) For patients who were alive at 6 wk (119 of 137), the proportion of patients who subsequently survived according to whether they had recovered renal function or had reached end-stage renal failure at 6 wk (P = 0.005).
Adverse Events
Patient survival at 3 and 12 mo was 56 (84%) of 67 and 51 (76%)of 67 in the intravenous methylprednisolone and 59 (84%) of70 and 51 (73%) of 70 in the plasma exchange groups (log ranktest P = 0.68; Figure 2B). The major causes of death were infection(n = 19), pulmonary hemorrhage (n = 6), and cardiovascular disease(n = 4). Patient survival was not significantly different betweentreatment groups and was not influenced by stratification, age,diagnosis, or ANCA subtype. In those who survived beyond 6 wk,renal recovery was associated with increased patient survivalbetween 6 wk and 12 mo (P = 0.005; Figure 2C).
A total of 244 adverse events were reported in 122 patients(Table 3). Severe or life-threatening events occurred in 32(48%) of 67 of the intravenous methylprednisolone group and35 (50%) of 70 of the plasma exchange group (P = 0.80). Leukopeniaand infection were the most common adverse events. Althoughuncommon, severe thrombocytopenia and thrombosis were seen onlyin the plasma exchange group and may have been related to theprocedure (Table 3).
Table 3. Adverse events according to type, severity (mild/moderate or severe/life threatening), and treatment group
Renal Function
There was no significant difference in the serum creatinineat 12 mo for those who recovered renal function between thetwo groups: 198 µmol/L (2.24 mg/dl; 95% CI 172 to 225)for the intravenous methylprednisolone group and 199 µmol/L(2.25 mg/dl; 95% CI 177 to 224) for the plasma exchange group(P = 0.87; Figure 3).
Figure 3. Sequential serum creatinine (µmol/L) for those who recovered renal function (mean; 95% confidence interval [CI]).
Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Scores
Scores for new or worse disease fell promptly with remissioninduction therapy and were similar between groups (Figure 4).Scores for persisting disease fell more slowly and remainedat low levels during the trial without significant differencesbetween groups.
Vasculitis Damage Index
By 6 and 12 mo, more damage accrued in the intravenous methylprednisolonegroup (mean 3.2 [95% CI 2.7 to 3.7] and 3.7 [95% CI 3.1 to 4.2])than in the plasma exchange group (mean 2.3 [95% CI 1.7 to 3.0;P = 0.005] and 2.9 [95% CI 2.2 to 3.6; P = 0.02], respectively).In both groups, there were significant increases in damage between0 and 6 mo (P < 0.001; Figure 5).
Figure 5. Sequential Vasculitis Damage Index scores (mean; 95% CI).
Short-Form 36
Physical and mental health measures all were >30% below theUK population norm at entry, with perceived role limitationdue to physical problems at >70% below the norm. Physicalhealth measures remained below control figures during the remissionphase. Mental health measures improved to an average of 14%less than the control population at remission. Within-sampleaverages, for the whole cohort, showed a significant improvementwith time throughout the trial (P < 0.001). No significantdifferences in Short-Form 36 (SF-36) scores were observed betweengroups.
This study found a higher rate of renal recovery and dialysisindependence after plasma exchange than after the addition ofintravenous methylprednisolone for patients with Wegener's granulomatosisor microscopic polyangiitis and a creatinine at diagnosis >500µmol/L (5.8 mg/dl). This effect was sustained to 12 mofrom entry with only two from each group progressing to ESRDafter initial recovery. The serum creatinine at 12 mo in thosewith renal recovery (mean 199 µmol/L [2.25 mg/dl]) iscompatible with sustained renal independence in the absenceof relapse of renal vasculitis.5, 18 The degree of glomerulosclerosisand tubulointerstitial fibrosis is predictive of a poor renaloutcome.19 Central review of diagnostic biopsies in this studyfound no differences in histologic variables between treatmentgroups, but because only 75% of biopsies were analyzed, an imbalancein the severity of fibrotic lesions cannot be entirely excluded.
The risk reduction of 24% for ESRD with plasma exchange is ofclinical importance in view of the cost, morbidity, and mortalityof end-stage renal failure, and the additional costs of plasmaexchange are outweighed by these savings. The improvement inrenal recovery rates with plasma exchange in the severe renalsubgroup is consistent with our hypothesis that plasma exchangeis most likely to be of benefit in those with the most severedisease. This study excluded patients who had been dialysisdependent for >2 wk because they were considered to havelittle chance of renal recovery.
Previous studies in rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis withoutanti-GBM antibodies have been small, have often included otherdiagnoses, and have failed to demonstrate a benefit of plasmaexchange except in subgroup analysis of those with advancedrenal failure.15, 16, 20, 21 The randomized, controlled trialof patients with systemic vasculitis reported by Pusey et al.15showed a significant benefit in patients who were on dialysisat the start of treatment, although numbers were small. Tworandomized studies in polyarteritis nodosa and Churg Straussangiitis found no additional therapeutic efficacy of plasmaexchange but did not have renal function as their primary endpoint.21, 22 One randomized trial in Wegener's granulomatosisand three nonrandomized, controlled trials in ANCA-associatedsystemic vasculitis reported benefits of plasma exchange onrenal outcome.23–26 Because this study focuses on a specificrenal subgroup, its results are not in conflict with those showingnegative results for plasma exchange and support the resultsof at least two previous randomized trials.15, 24, 25
There was no difference in rates of adverse effects, infections,or mortality between treatment groups. Previous studies havedemonstrated the safety of plasma exchange, and complicationsof vascular access are less relevant when this is also requiredfor renal support.27 The high rate of severe adverse events,46%, was largely due to cytopenias and infections related tocorticosteroids and cyclophosphamide. It was higher than inprevious studies in patients with less severe renal functionusing similar regimens.5, 12 This difference may in part beexplained by the delayed clearance of cyclophosphamide and itsmetabolites in renal failure and by the age of patients in thisstudy.28
Mortality was 25.5% at 12 mo, considerably higher than in vasculitisstudies without severe renal failure, with infection and lunghemorrhage being the major causes of death.12, 29 Most deathsoccurred during the first 3 mo, when corticosteroid dosageswere highest and vasculitis was most active. A link among cyclophosphamide,neutropenia, sepsis, and death was previously shown, as wasthe independent role of steroid dosage on infective risk.5 However,after 3 mo, there was a higher mortality in those who had failedto recover renal function, confirming results from cohort studies.5Thus, effective early therapy is imperative to avoid vasculiticdeath and maximize the chance of renal recovery. When comparedwith a study from this group of vasculitis with serum creatinine<500 µmol/L (5.8 mg/dl), patients in this study wereolder (mean 64.3 versus 55.6 yr; P < 0.0001). They were alsomore likely to have a diagnosis of microscopic polyangiitis(69 versus 39%; P < 0.0001) and to be MPO-ANCA positive (52versus 37%; P = 0.003).12 Age has previously been shown to beassociated with early mortality in renal vasculitis and mayhave accounted, in part, for the high mortality that was seenin this study.5, 18 The contribution of drug toxicity to themortality of severe renal vasculitis indicates that dosing ofcyclophosphamide and corticosteroids in this patient group requiresurgent consideration and emphasizes the need for safer agents.
Anti-MPO antibodies can cause glomerulonephritis and alveolarcapillaritis in animal models, and ANCA have potent effectson neutrophil activation, cytokine and enzyme release, leukocyte–endothelialinteractions, and endothelial cytotoxicity in human in vitrosystems.8, 9, 30–32 There is a rationale for the physicalremoval of ANCA by plasma exchange, whereas simultaneous corticosteroidsand cyclophosphamide suppress inflammation and autoantibodyproduction. Plasma exchange also removes other proinflammatoryfactors, including cytokines, complement, coagulation factors,soluble endothelial adhesion molecules and neutrophil enzymes,which may contribute to its effect.33, 34 Sequential ANCA assayswere not routinely performed in this study, and it is not knownwhether the dosage of plasma exchange should be titrated againstthe ANCA level, as has been advocated for anti-GBM disease.35
Our study supports the use of plasma exchange in the treatmentof ANCA-associated vasculitis that presents with renal failure.The role of intravenous methylprednisolone in addition to plasmaexchange for this indication and the role of plasma exchangefor other severe vasculitic manifestations, such as diffusealveolar hemorrhage, requires further study.13, 36, 37
Patients were recruited from 28 hospitals in nine European countrieswith local ethical approval after giving written informed consent.The study conformed to the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki andsubsequent amendments.
Study Design
All patients received the same oral drug regimen of cyclophosphamideand prednisolone. At trial entry, patients were randomly assignedto receive, in addition, either intravenous methylprednisoloneor plasma exchange. At 6 mo, cyclophosphamide was withdrawnand azathioprine was commenced. The study duration was 12 mo.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion required (1) a diagnosis of Wegener's granulomatosisor microscopic polyangiitis, using criteria adapted from thedisease definitions of the Chapel Hill consensus conference1,12; (2) biopsy-proven, pauci-immune, necrotizing, and/or crescenticglomerulonephritis, in the absence of other glomerulopathy;and (3) serum creatinine >500 µmol/L (5.8 mg/dl). Exclusioncriteria were (1) age <18 or >80 yr; (2) inadequate contraceptionin women of child-bearing age; (3) pregnancy; (4) previous malignancy;(5) hepatitis B antigenemia, anti–hepatitis C virus, oranti-HIV antibody; (6) other multisystem autoimmune disease;(7) circulating anti-GBM antibodies or linear IgG staining ofthe GBM on renal biopsy; (8) life-threatening nonrenal manifestationsof vasculitis, including alveolar hemorrhage requiring mechanicalventilation within 24 h of admission; (9) dialysis for >2wk before entry; (10) creatinine >200 µmol/L (2.3 mg/dl)1 yr before entry; (11) a second clearly defined cause of renalfailure; (12) previous episode of biopsy-proven necrotizingand/or crescentic glomerulonephritis; (13) >2 wk of treatmentwith cyclophosphamide or azathioprine; (14) >500 mg of intravenousmethylprednisolone; (15) plasma exchange within the precedingyear; (16) >3 mo of treatment with oral prednisolone; and(17) allergy to study medications.
Drug Regimens
Both groups received oral cyclophosphamide 2.5 mg/kg per d (2mg/kg per d for age >60 yr), reduced to 1.5 mg/kg per d at3 mo and stopped at 6 mo. Azathioprine 2 mg/kg per d was commencedat 6 mo. Oral prednisolone was tapered from 1 mg/kg per d atentry to 0.25 mg/kg per d by 10 wk, 15 mg/d at 3 mom and 10mg/d from 5 to 12 mo. Prophylaxis against steroid-induced gastritis,fungal infection, and Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia was suggestedbut was not mandatory. The intravenous methylprednisolone groupreceived 1000 mg/d intravenous methylprednisolone for threeconsecutive months, starting on the day of entry.
Plasma Exchange Procedure
Because plasma exchange protocols varied between participatingcenters, investigators were permitted to use their local procedurewith respect to (1) plasma filtration or centrifugation, (2)vascular access, (3) anticoagulation, and (4) daily or alternate-dayexchanges. The following aspects of the procedure were mandatedin the protocol: (1) A total of seven plasma exchanges within14 d of study entry, (2) a plasma exchange volume of 60 ml/kgon each occasion, and (3) volume replacement with 5% albumin.The use of fresh frozen plasma at the end of the procedure toreplenish coagulation factors was recommended but not mandatedfor patients who were at risk for hemorrhage, for example afterkidney biopsy.
Evaluations
Study assessments were performed after 0, 1.5, 3, 6, 9, and12 mo. They included full blood count, erythrocyte sedimentationrate, C-reactive protein, alanine transaminase, serum creatinine,and glucose. Disease activity was measured by the BirminghamVasculitis Activity Score.38 Cumulative all-cause damage wasscored in the Vasculitis Damage Index at 0, 6, and 12 mo.39The SF-36 questionnaire was performed at each assessment.40Adverse events were graded by 22 predefined criteria into mild,moderate, severe, or life threatening.
Renal Histology
A total of 102 (75%) renal biopsies from the 137 patients inthe study were available for central review; in two, there wasinsufficient material for further analysis. Biopsies were takenat diagnosis and scored according to a previously standardizedprotocol.3, 19 Briefly, each glomerulus was scored separatelyfor the presence of fibrinoid necrosis, crescents (cellular/fibrousand segmental/circumferential), sclerosis (local, segmental,or global), periglomerular infiltrates, granulomatous reactions,and other lesions. Affected glomeruli were reported as the percentageof the total number of glomeruli in a biopsy. Most interstitial,tubular, and vascular lesions were scored dichotomously, exceptfor interstitial infiltrates, type of cellular infiltrates (neutrophils,mononuclear cells, and eosinophils), interstitial fibrosis,and tubular atrophy, which were scored semiquantitatively. Eachbiopsy was evaluated by two observers. Discrepancies betweenobservers were resolved by conference during central reviewsto achieve a consensus for each biopsy. The average distributionof glomerular, tubulointerstitial, and vascular lesions wasevaluated for the total group of patients for whom histologicdata were available. Comparisons between treatment groups wereperformed by independent-samples t test for glomerular lesionsand by nonparametric analysis (Wilcoxon-signed rank test) fortubulointerstitial and vascular lesions.
Outcome Measures
The primary efficacy measure was renal recovery at 3 mo definedby patient survival, dialysis independence, and serum creatinine<500 µmol/L (5.8 mg/dl). Secondary end points includedpatient survival at 12 mo; ESRD, defined by dialysis requirementfor at least 6 wk without subsequent renal recovery; serum creatininein recovering patients at 12 mo; and adverse event rates.
Statistical Analyses
Randomization was performed centrally by permuted blocks offour stratified by country and by whether the patient was nonoliguricor likely to require dialysis within the next 48 h. Primarydata were collected in record books and submitted for centralizedcomputer entry. The data were validated against the record booksbefore analysis (SPSS PC statistical package, version 9; SPSS,Chicago, IL) by two data managers who had sole access to thedata.
The predicted renal recovery rate for the intravenous methylprednisolonegroup was 50%, and the study was designed to detect an increasein recovery rate in the plasma exchange group of >20% (i.e.,from 50% to at least 70%).41 Allowing for a 10% dropout, 150patients were required to achieve a significance level of 0.05(two sided) and power of 0.8.
The primary end point was analyzed according to the intention-to-treatprinciple with death being regarded as a failure to achieverenal recovery. Renal recovery rates at 3 mo were compared bythe Pearson 2 test. Renal and patient survivals between groupswere compared by the log-rank test. A Cox regression model wasused to determine the hazard ratio for renal survival. The influenceof treatment group, stratification (nonoliguric or dialysisrequiring), age, diagnosis (Wegener's granulomatosis or microscopicpolyangiitis), and ANCA subtype (PR3-ANCA or MPO-ANCA) on renalrecovery and patient survival were assessed by Cox proportionalhazards analysis. Patient survival after 6 wk was compared betweenpatients who had recovered renal function and those who hadnot by log-rank test. Demographic details, adverse events, BirminghamVasculitis Activity Score (area under the curve), serum creatinine,and Vasculitis Damage Index were compared between groups byMann-Whitney U test or Pearson 2 test. SF-36 mean scores werecalculated for each of the eight dimensions using the Likertmethod of summated ratings, and change in scores over time wascompared between groups by repeated measures analysis. All testsof significance were two sided and were considered significantat the 0.05 level. No interim analyses were performed.
This trial was designed and launched as part of the EuropeanCommunity Systemic Vasculitis Trial project (contract nos. BMH1-CT93-1078and CIPD-CT94-0307) and finished as part of the Associated VasculitisEuropean Randomized Trial project (contract nos. BMH4-CT97-2328and IC20-CT97-0019) funded by the European Union.
We thank Jo Hermans (Leiden, Netherlands) and Paul Landais (Paris,France) for statistical advice, Helen Talbot (Edinburgh, UK)for software design, UK for data management, and Lucy Jayne(London, UK) for trial administration.
Participating physicians: M. Wissing, Institut Edith Cavell,Brussels, Belgium; J. Sennesael, AZ VUB Jette, Brussels, Belgium;M. Dhaene, Clinique Louis Caty, Baudour, Belgium; I. Rychlik,3rd Faculty of Medicine, Prague, Czech Republic; A. Wiik, StatensSeriminstitutet, Copenhagen, Denmark; A. Ekstrand, HelsinkiUniversity Hospital, Helsinki, Finland; P. Lesavre, HôpitalNecker, Paris, France; P. Vanhille, Centre Hospitalier, Valenciennes,France; K. de Groot, University Hospital, Hannover, Germany;O. Hergesell, K. Andrassy, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg,Germany; H. Rupprecht, S. Weidner, Klinikum Nürnberg, Nürnberg,Germany; R. Nowack, W. Schmitt, University Hospital, Mannheim,Germany; M. Vischedyk, St. Vinzenz-Hospital Paderborn, Paderborn,Germany; F. Ferrario, Ospedale San Carlo Borromeo, Borromeo,Italy; R. Confalonieri, Ospedale Niguarda, Niguarda, Italy;J. Dadoniene, University of Vilnius, Vilnius, Lithuania; E.C.Hagen, University Eemland Hospital, Amersfoort, Netherlands;C. Verburgh, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands;J.W. Cohen Tervaert, Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht,Netherlands; M. Valles, Hospital Josep Trueta, Girona, Spain;R. Poveda, Hospital Bellvitje, Barcelona, Spain; J. Ballerin,F. Calero, Fundación Puigvert, Barcelona, Spain; M. Heimburger,Huddinge University Hospital, Huddinge, Sweden; M. Segelmark,G. Sterner, University Hospital of Malmö, Malmö, Sweden;M. Tidman, Nephrology University Hospital, Orebro, Sweden; D.Adu, L. Harper, Queen Elizabeth II Hospital, Birmingham, UK;P. Mathieson, C. Tomson, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, UK; R.Luqmani, N. Turner, Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, UK; J. Feehally,University Hospital, Leicester, UK; P. Mason, Churchill Hospital,Oxford, UK; A. Burns, Royal Free Hospital, London, UK; D. Oliveira,St. George's Hospital, London, UK; J. Stevens, Southampton Hospital,Southampton, UK; A. Williams, Morriston Hospital, Swansea, UK.
Footnotes
Published online ahead of print. Publication date availableat www.jasn.org.
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