Publication details

Léčba monoklonální gamapatie renálního významu s projevy choroby z ukládání lehkých řetězců (Light Chain Deposition Disease - LCDD) v transplantované ledvině. Popis případu a přehled literatury

Title in English Treatment of monoclonal gammopathy of renal significance with manifestations of Light Chain Deposition Disease (LCDD) in the transplanted kidney
Authors

ROHÁĽ Tomáš KMENT Martin VOSKA Luděk ADAM Zdeněk BORSKÝ Marek ZDRAŽILOVÁ DUBSKÁ Lenka KREJČÍ Marta KRÁL Zdeněk POUR Luděk

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Vnitřní lékařství
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
web https://casopisvnitrnilekarstvi.cz/artkey/vnl-202501-0014_treatment-of-monoclonal-gammopathy-of-renal-significance-with-manifestations-of-light-chain-deposition-disease.php
Doi https://doi.org/10.36290/vnl.2025.011
Keywords Light Chain Deposition Disease (LCDD); free light chains; renal failure; daratumumab; kidney transplantation
Description Light Chain Deposition Disease (LCDD) is a very rarely diagnosed condition affecting the kidneys. We describe a case where this diagnosis was morphologically confirmed in a biopsy of a transplanted kidney, and retrospectively identified in a previous kidney biopsy where the changes were not correctly classified. The biopsy of the transplanted kidney was performed due to worsening graft function. Subsequent testing focused on monoclonal gammopathy, revealing elevated serum concentrations of free kappa light chains (FLC) with a maximum FLC kappa value of 226 mg/l and FLC lambda at only 6 mg/l. The FLC kappa / FLC lambda ratio was clearly pathological at 37 (normal range 0.26-1.65). Serum and urine immunofixation electrophoresis were repeatedly negative. Bone marrow cytology described 8% pathological plasma cells, and flow cytometry demonstrated 0.7% plasma cells among all nuclear bone marrow cells. These plasma cells were 100% clonal, of the abnormal kappa + phenotype. The diagnosis was thus concluded as a non-malignant gammopathy of the type „monoclonal gammopathy of clinical significance“ with renal damage in a morphological form corresponding to LCDD. A combination of daratumumab, bortezomib, cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone was chosen for treatment LCDD. Free light kappa chains decreased below the lower limit of the norm during the first two months of anti-CD38 therapy. LCDD is one of the many forms of kidney damage that can occur in non-malignant gammopathies. Therefore, FLC testing should always be performed as part of the differential diagnosis of renal failure. For kidney damage by monoclonal immunoglobulin, a classification created by The International Kidney and Monoclonal Gammopathy Research Group was accepted. It is advisable to inform the evaluating morphologists of the possible presence of pathological concentrations of FLC and/or M-Ig so that they can focus the diagnosis in this direction, otherwise these rare forms of kidney injury may remain unrecognized.

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