Renal involvement in multiple myeloma and monoclonal gammopathies

Hématologie ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 342-356
Author(s):  
Eric Moumas ◽  
Christophe Sirac ◽  
Sébastien Delbès ◽  
Estelle Desport ◽  
Emmanuelle Plaisier ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 683-691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fulvio Stacul ◽  
◽  
Michele Bertolotto ◽  
Henrik S. Thomsen ◽  
Gabriele Pozzato ◽  
...  

Nephrology ◽  
1984 ◽  
pp. 885-894
Author(s):  
Manuel Martínez-Maldonado ◽  
Luis Báez-Díaz

2021 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 249
Author(s):  
MuhammadAbdul Mabood Khalil ◽  
AhmedSuleman Rajput ◽  
Ruzita Ghani ◽  
SM Rahmat Ullah ◽  
MayKyaw Thet ◽  
...  

Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 1254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrien Bosseboeuf ◽  
Nicolas Mennesson ◽  
Sophie Allain-Maillet ◽  
Anne Tallet ◽  
Eric Piver ◽  
...  

Chronic stimulation by infectious or self-antigens initiates subsets of monoclonal gammopathies of undetermined significance (MGUS), smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM), or multiple myeloma (MM). Recently, glucosylsphingosine (GlcSph) was reported to be the target of one third of monoclonal immunoglobulins (Igs). In this study of 233 patients (137 MGUS, 6 SMM, 90 MM), we analyzed the GlcSph-reactivity of monoclonal Igs and non-clonal Igs. The presence of GlcSph-reactive Igs in serum was unexpectedly frequent, detected for 103/233 (44.2%) patients. However, GlcSph was targeted by the patient’s monoclonal Ig for only 37 patients (15.9%); for other patients (44 MGUS, 22 MM), the GlcSph-reactive Igs were non-clonal. Then, the characteristics of patients were examined: compared to MM with an Epstein-Barr virus EBNA-1-reactive monoclonal Ig, MM patients with a GlcSph-reactive monoclonal Ig had a mild presentation. The inflammation profiles of patients were similar except for moderately elevated levels of 4 cytokines for patients with GlcSph-reactive Igs. In summary, our study highlights the importance of analyzing clonal Igs separately from non-clonal Igs and shows that, if autoimmune responses to GlcSph are frequent in MGUS/SMM and MM, GlcSph presumably represents the initial pathogenic event for ~16% cases. Importantly, GlcSph-initiated MM appears to be a mild form of MM disease.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 1803-1803
Author(s):  
Melissa Snyder ◽  
Angela Dispenzieri ◽  
S.Vincent Rajkumar ◽  
Robert Kyle ◽  
Joanne Benson ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1803 Poster Board I-829 Background Plasma cell proliferative disorders are monitored by a variety of methods. Serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP) and/or urine PEP M-spike quantitation are commonly assessed in patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS), smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM), and multiple myeloma (MM) to determine disease progression, response, or relapse. Serum immunoglobin (Ig) concentrations can be quantitated when the M-spike is large or if the migration is obscured within the SPEP beta fraction. Serum FLC quantitation provides a rapid indicator of response, will detect the rare occurrence of FLC escape, and will allow disease monitoring in the absence of a measurable serum or urine M-spike. The International Myeloma Working Group (IMWG) has recommended that the serum and urine M-spike should be used to monitor disease, and that FLC quantitation should be used only if there is no measurable disease by electrophoresis and if the monoclonal FLC concentration is greater than 10 mg/dL in the context of an abnormal FLC K/L ratio. We have studied serial samples in clinically stable patients in order to assess the total variability (analytic and biologic) of these assays and to confirm the IMWG recent recommendations. Methods Serial data from stable MGUS patients (n=35) were identified by the availability of all 3 serum test results (M-spike, Ig, FLC) in at least 4 serial samples that were obtained 9 months to 5 years apart and whose serum M-spikes varied by less than 25%. For MM (n=60) and SMM (n=48) the samples were within 9-15 months and serum M-spikes varied by less than 0.5 g/dL. Among the 60 MM, 48 SMM, and 35 MGUS patients, there were 23, 41, and 18 patients with measurable disease by serum M-spike (i.e. M-spike >1 g/dL); 19, 10, and 10 patients with an evaluable FLC (i.e. monoclonal FLC > 10 mg/dL and an abnormal FLC ratio); and 5, 5, and 1 patient with an evaluable urine (i.e. M-spike > 200mg/24 hr). The FLC data was analyzed as the involved FLC concentration (iFLC), the difference between the involved and uninvolved FLC concentration (dFLC), and the FLC K/L ratio (rFLC). The coefficients of variability (CV) were determined for each methodology in each patient sample set, and the average CVs were determined. Igs were quantitated by immunonephelometry using a Siemens BNII and Siemens reagent sets; kappa and lambda FLC were quantitated using a Siemens BNII and Freelite reagent sets from The Binding Site; M-spikes were quantitated using Helena SPIFE SPE and reagent sets. Results The CVs for the Ig quantitation, SPEP M-spike, FLC quantitation, and urine M-spike in each of the patient groups are listed in the table: Our laboratory's interassay analytic CV for replicate samples are 4-5% for Ig quantitation, 6-8% for SPEP M-spikes, 6-7% for FLC quantitation, and 5-7% for urine M-spikes. The analytic CVs of the methods are similar, but the total (analytic + biologic) CVs are very different. The samples have been selected by restricting the variability of serum M-spike values; when we apply the same criteria to the IgG quantitation, the IgG total CV comes closer to the serum M-spike CVs. The remaining differences, however, may be due to biologic variability contributed by polyclonal Ig. The total CV for iFLC is similar to the urine M-spike CV and suggests a previously unrecognized large biologic CV for serum FLC. The iFLC and dFLC CVs were comparable but were smaller than the rFLC CV. Conclusion The variability of the serum and urine M-spike, Ig, and FLC measurements confirm the IMWG recommendations for patient monitoring. If a patient has a measurable M-spike >1 g/dL, then the serum M-spike should be followed. If there is no measurable disease, then the iFLC can be monitored, provided that the rFLC is abnormal and the iFLC concentration is >10 mg/dL. Although the number of patients with evaluable urine M-spikes in this study is small, larger studies may confirm the utility of serum FLC compared to urine M-spike for monitoring patients with monoclonal gammopathies. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2893-2893
Author(s):  
Peggy Lymberi ◽  
Evangelos Terpos ◽  
Aikaterini Hatzioannou ◽  
Evangelos Eleutherakis-Papaiakovou ◽  
Apostolos Balafas ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2893 Serum monoclonal immunoglobulins (M-Igs) of patients with monoclonal gammopathies are known to possess antibody activity against autoantigens, bacterial antigens and haptens, but their incidence is controversial. So far, high incidence of autoantibodies (autoAb) have been demonstrated against actin, Ro/SS-A and La/SS-B for M-Igs of all three classes (IgG, IgA, IgM) and against Fc fragment of IgG and the Ii group exclusively for IgM M-Ig. Other less frequent antiboby specificities of M-Igs include anti-myosin, anti-tubulin, anti-thyroglobulin and anti-DNA. M-Igs with anti-actin activity were found to express polyreactivity, which is a property of natural autoAbs (NAbs). NAbs are germ-line encoded, occur in all species, circulate in low concentrations and belong to all Ig classes. NAbs play important immunoregulatory role and anti-F(ab')2 reactivity is crucial for the establishment of the idiotypic network. The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency of human M-Igs that exhibit NAb-like activity in patients with monoclonal gammopathies and to explore possible correlations with their clinical features. Thus, 151 M-Igs (124 of IgG class: 71IgG-kappa/53 IgG-lambda and 27 of IgA class: 16 IgA-kappa/11 IgA-lambda) from patients with symptomatic multiple myeloma (MM; n=136), asymptomatic MM (n=8) or MGUS (n=7) and 50 M-Igs from patients with Waldenström Macroglobulinemia (WM) or IgM-MGUS (43 IgM-kappa and 7 IgM-lambda), without any autoimmune diseases, were studied by an in-house ELISA for polyreactivity against six autoantigens (native DNA, actin, tubulin, myosin, carbonic anhydrase, thyroglobulin) and the non-self hapten TriNitroPhenyl (TNP). Sera were also tested for antibody activity against F(ab')2 fragment of human polyclonal IgGs. Most of these antigens are known targets of NAbs. Sera were first screened with enzyme-coupled human heavy chain antibodies (anti-G, anti-M and anti-A), and reactivity–with the exception of anti-F(ab')2–was further attributed to the M-Ig using enzyme-coupled light chain antibodies (anti-kappa and anti-lambda). A significant proportion (18.2%: 35/192 evaluated patients) of pathological sera exhibited anti-F(ab')2 activity (27 from IgG-MM, 3 from IgA-MM and 5 from WM patients). Among the total M-Igs tested, 9.5% (18/189) recognised actin, 8.7% (17/194) carbonic anhydrase, 4.6% (9/194) thyroglobulin, 3.7% (7/186) TNP, 3.5% (7/196) tubulin, 2.5% (5/193) myosin and 1.5% (3/188) DNA. M-Igs reacting with actin, carbonic anhydrase, tubulin, myosin and TNP were found to belong to all three Ig classes (IgG, IgA, and IgM). Among the IgG M-Igs tested, the most frequent reactivity was that for thyroglobulin (7.6%), while among the IgA and IgM M-Igs the highest incidence observed was for actin and carbonic anhydrase (23%, 23% and 16.6%, 15.2%, respectively). Positive IgM and IgG M-Ig had either kappa or lambda light chain in a similar proportion, while positive IgA were mostly IgA-lambda (16/18). A high percentage of positive M-Igs from MM and WM patients were polyreactive (46%), i.e., reacted with at least two panel antigens. Polyreactivity was a prominent characteristic of IgA (6/6) and IgM (9/13) but not of IgG (6/36) M-Ig. Most frequent polyreactivity profile was that for actin, carbonic anhydrase and TNP. There was no significant correlation of immune-related features of symptomatic WM (immune cytopenias, cold agglutinin disease, cryoglobulinemia) or of MM characteristics (ISS, CRAB, LDH, plasma cell infiltration) with any of the detected M-Ig specificities or their NAb-like profile. In conclusion, we report for the first time anti-carbonic anhydrase and anti-TNP activity of the M-Igs from patients with monoclonal gammopathies. We also report high incidence of anti- F(ab')2 activity in the sera of these patients as well as of polyreactive M-Igs. Our findings suggest that the M-Igs with NAb activity might reflect the expansion of a clone normally producing a NAb. To-date, it has been assumed that a naive B-cell is first driven to clonal expansion by antigenic stimulation and that subsequently, an oncogenic stimulus results in malignant transformation. Assuming that certain malignant monoclonal gammopathies arise from the proliferation of a clone normally producing a NAb which recognise F(ab')2 and hence is probably involved in the regulation of the NAbs network, it may also be postulated that this may result in deregulation of this network. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document