Most frequent life-threatening hereditary kidney disease
Aetiology
- Mutations on PKD gene1 in 85% of cases - located on chromosome 16
- PKD2 mutations seen in 15% of cases - located on chromosome 4
- Mutation type has prognostic indications - PKD1 patients develop end stage kidney failure at an earlier stage
Pathophysiology
- Large cysts form over time because of abnormal proliferation of tubular cells and an increase in cellular secretion with changes in the extracellular matrix
- Cysts often lined by simple epithelium
- Often secondary changes - haemorrhage, infarction, rupture
Clinical presentation
Renal
- Reduced urine concentration ability
- Chronic pain
- Hypertension - common, early (mean age 31 years)
- Haematuria - cyst rupture, cystitis, stones
- Cyst infection
- Renal failure
Extra renal
Hepatic cysts
- Most common extra renal manifestation
- Liver cysts present 10 years after renal cysts
- Liver function generally preserved
- Can result in SOB, pain, ankle swelling
Intra-cranial aneurysms
- Seen in clusters of family members
- Mainly in the anterior circulation territory
- Screening indicated in patients with family history
Cardiac disease
- Mitral/aortic valve prolapse
- Valvular disease - collagenous/myxomatous degeneration
Other
- Diverticular disease - increased incidence and complications
- Hernias - increased incidence of abdominal/inguinal hernias
ADPKD in children
- Early onset can be in utero or in first year of life
- Distinguishing from ARPKD difficult - USS suggestion of congenital hepatic fibrosis suggests recessive disease
Investigations
- USS - presence of multiple bilateral cyst, renal enlargement
- MRI (preferred) or CT when unclear on USS
- Genetic - linkage analysis, mutation analysis
Management
- Rigorous control of hypertension
- Education - importance of hydration
- Proteinurea reduction through blood pressure control
- Management of cyst haemorrahage and cyst infection
- New treatment, Tolvaptan (ADH receptor antagonist) is the first drug show to slow loss of kidney function in patients with PKD
- Genetic counselling - offspring of an affected individual are at a 50% risk of having the disease
- Management of renal failure - dialysis, transplantation, management of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular factors