Table 3.
Class | Biopsy Findings | Clinical Features | Patients Presenting with Nephrotic Syndrome, % |
---|---|---|---|
Class I: minimal mesangial LN | No LM abnormalities; isolated mesangial IC deposits on IF and/or EM | Normal urine or microscopic hematuria | 0 |
Class II: mesangial proliferative LN | Mesangial hypercellularity or matrix expansion with mesangial IC deposits on IF and/or EM | Microscopic hematuria and/or low-grade proteinuria | 0 |
Lupus podocytopathy | Normal glomeruli, FSGS, or mesangial proliferation on LM; IC deposits absent or limited to mesangium on IF and/or EM; diffuse and severe foot process effacement on EM | Nephrotic syndrome | >90 |
Class III: focal LN | <50% of glomeruli on LM display segmental (<50% of glomerular tuft) or global (>50% of glomerular tuft) endocapillary and/or extracapillary proliferation or sclerosis; mesangial and focal subendothelial IC deposits on IF and EM | Nephritic urine sediment and subnephrotic proteinuria | 30 |
Class IV: diffuse LN | ≥50% of glomeruli on LM display endocapillary and/or extracapillary proliferation or sclerosis; mesangial and diffuse subendothelial IC deposits on IF and EM | Nephritic and nephrotic syndromes, hypertension, reduced kidney function | 50 |
Class V: membranous LN | Diffuse thickening of the glomerular capillary walls on LM with subepithelial IC deposits on IF and EM with or without mesangial IC deposits | Nephrotic syndrome | 80 |
Class VI: advanced sclerosing LN | >90% of glomeruli on LM are globally sclerosed with no residual activity | Advanced CKD | <10 |
Abbreviations: EM, electron microscopy; FSGS, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; IC, immune complex; IF, immunofluorescence microscopy; LM, light microscopy; LN, lupus nephritis.
Adapted from Bomback.15