Abstract
We studied 29 patients affected by acute renal failure due to multiple myeloma with Bence-Jones proteinuria >1 g/day to evaluate the effectiveness of plasma exchange in the treatment of severe myeloma nephropathy. Renal failure was severe enough to require dialysis in 24 cases, while the remaining 5 patients showed serum creatinine levels greater than 5 mg/dl. The patients were randomly allocated to Group I (15 patients undergoing plasma exchange together with corticosteroids, cytotoxic drug, hemodialysis only when needed) or to Group II (14 patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis together with corticosteroids and cytotoxic drug). In group I Bence-Jones proteinuria decreased dramatically (P < 0.01) with a significant increase in urine output (P < 0.001), while Group II presented a slight reduction in Bence-Jones proteinuria without a significant increase in daily diuresis. Thirteen out the 15 Group I patients recovered renal function reaching serum creatinine levels ≤2.5 mg/dl in most cases. Only two patients in Group II improved renal failure well enough to stop dialysis. The one-year survival rate was significantly higher in Group I (66%) than in Group II (28%, P < 0.01). We conclude that plasma exchange associated to chemotherapy rapidly removes large amounts of light chains, improves both renal function and long-term survival expectancies.
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CITATION STYLE
Zucchelli, P., Pasquali, S., Cagnoli, L., & Ferrari, G. (1988). Controlled plasma exchange trial in acute renal failure due to multiple myeloma. Kidney International, 33(6), 1175–1180. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.1988.127
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