- Mutliple myeloma – Malignant proliferation of plasma cells in BM with prod of Ig
- Ig light chains (AKA abnormal paraproteins) → BJ proteins → toxic to tubular system
- Light chains are filtered at glomeruli and appear as BJ proteins
Pathogenesis
- Kidney damage caused by
- Hypercalcemia
- Light chain cast/myeloma cast nephropathy
- Large tubular casts in urine sediment (IgG light chain + Tamm-Horsfall (THP))
- The abnormal proteins (Ig) bind with THP → form large tubular casts which are too big to pass → blockage → kidney disease
- Hyperuricemia
- Infection, amyloidosis
- Monoclonal Ig deposition disease
- Deposits of Ig in kidneys, heart, brain, liver
- Mostly light chain – cause nodular glomerulosclerosis, similar to DM nephropathy
Clinical features
- Fatigue, fever, night sweats
- WL, anaemia
- Myeloma nephritis – BJ proteinuria
- Tubular pathology signs – decreased ability to concentrate urine, tubular acidosis
- Fanconi syndrome – inadequate reabsorption in proximal renal tubule
- Hypercalemia, hypercalcuria, hyperphosphaturia (hypophosphatemia), glycosuria
- 3 clinical forms of MN
- ARF, CRF, Fanconi syndrome (proximal tubule acidosis)
Diagnosis
- Bone scans, BJ proteins
Treatment
- ↑fluids to increase diuresis
- Dialysis DOES NOT improve results – do not give furosemide as it promotes cast formation
- Transplantation
- Treat hypercalcemia
- Allopurinol [300-600mg]
End organ damage CRAB