Table 1.
Renal disorder | Association/subtype |
---|---|
Glomerular lesion | |
HIV FSGS or “classic” | APOL1 risk variants |
HIVAN | Mixed variant (HIV FSGS in combination with a proliferative glomerulonephritis) |
| |
HIVICD (these patients may be coinfected with hepatitis B or C) | Mesangial proliferative Membranoproliferative (types I and II) Lupus like Exudative proliferative Crescentic Immunoglobulin A Membranous |
| |
Various glomerulonephropathies (heterogeneous group with various etiologies) |
Minimal change disease Immunotactoid nephropathy Amyloidosis |
| |
HIV TTP/HUS | TTP HUS |
| |
Tubulointerstitial disease | |
Proximal tubular injury | Tenofovir, adefovir, cidofovir, didanosine |
| |
Chronic tubular injury | Amphotericin, tenofovir, adefovir, cidofovir |
| |
Diabetes insipidus | Amphotericin, tenofovir, didanosine, abacavir |
| |
Crystal nephropathy | Indinavir, atazanavir, sulfadiazine, ciprofloxacin, acyclovir (IV) |
| |
Interstitial nephritis | Infections (including HIV, BK virus) Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome following cART Allergy to β-lactam, rifampicin, proton pump inhibitors, allopurinol, phenytoin, and drugs causing crystal nephropathy (listed in this table) |
| |
Comorbid illness | |
Diabetic nephropathy | |
Hypertensive nephrosclerosis | |
Autoimmune disease (lupus nephritis) |
Note: Adapted from Naicker S, Rahmanian S, Kopp JB. HIV and chronic kidney disease. Clin Nephrol. 2015;83(7 Suppl 1):32–38, with permission.137 Adapted from Comprehensive Clinical Nephrology. Johnson RJ, Feehally J, Floege J, editors. Human immunodeficiency virus infection and the kidney. Kopp JB, Naicker S. Philadelphia: © Elsevier Saunders; 2015.138
Abbreviations: cART, combined antiretroviral therapy; FSGS, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; HIVAN, HIV-associated nephropathy; HIVICD, HIV immune complex disease; HUS, hemolytic uremic syndrome; IV, intravenous; TTP, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura.