Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi Arabia

To study the clinical indications and histopathological pattern of renal biopsies and renal resection specimens in the pediatric age group (birth to 17 years) in a large academic center in western Saudi Arabia. A retrospective review of the computerized database of the Pathology Department at King A...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Layla Saleh Abdullah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2012-01-01
Series:Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation
Online Access:http://www.sjkdt.org/article.asp?issn=1319-2442;year=2012;volume=23;issue=2;spage=377;epage=384;aulast=Abdullah
id doaj-6e32e21b85a44231a5b9a2f83582a60d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6e32e21b85a44231a5b9a2f83582a60d2020-11-24T20:48:03ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsSaudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation1319-24422012-01-0123237738410.4103/1319-2442.93187Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi ArabiaLayla Saleh AbdullahTo study the clinical indications and histopathological pattern of renal biopsies and renal resection specimens in the pediatric age group (birth to 17 years) in a large academic center in western Saudi Arabia. A retrospective review of the computerized database of the Pathology Department at King Abdul Aziz University Hospital (KAUH) was carried out on the final patho-logy reports of all children of the age of 17 years and below who either had ultrasound-guided renal biopsies or partial or total renal resections during the period between January 1995 and December 2008. All the specimens were reported by our pathology department. The most common clinical indication in the study group (242) is nephrotic syndrome (117, 48.3%), fol-lowed by systemic lupus erythromatosis for staging (30, 12.4%), nephritic syndrome (27, 11.1%) and renal mass for histological diagnosis (17, 7.0%). The most frequently reported pathological diagnosis was renal glomerulopathies, constituting 183 cases (n = 183, 75.6%) of the total number of pathology reports reviewed. Primary glomerulopathies were more common (n = 155, 88.4%) than the secondary ones (n = 28, 11.6%). The second most common pediatric renal pathology in this study was renal neoplasms (14, 5.7%). Vascular renal diseases and renal glomerulosclerosis ranked as the third pathological diagnosis in order of frequency in this study, with ten cases (10, 4.1%). The most common clinical indication for renal tissue sampling in this study is nephrotic syndrome and the most frequently detected pathology is glomerulonephritis. Larger multicentre studies are needed to further study pediatric nephropathies.http://www.sjkdt.org/article.asp?issn=1319-2442;year=2012;volume=23;issue=2;spage=377;epage=384;aulast=Abdullah
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Layla Saleh Abdullah
spellingShingle Layla Saleh Abdullah
Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi Arabia
Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation
author_facet Layla Saleh Abdullah
author_sort Layla Saleh Abdullah
title Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi Arabia
title_short Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi Arabia
title_full Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: A study from a university hospital in western Saudi Arabia
title_sort histopathological pattern of pediatric renal diseases: a study from a university hospital in western saudi arabia
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation
issn 1319-2442
publishDate 2012-01-01
description To study the clinical indications and histopathological pattern of renal biopsies and renal resection specimens in the pediatric age group (birth to 17 years) in a large academic center in western Saudi Arabia. A retrospective review of the computerized database of the Pathology Department at King Abdul Aziz University Hospital (KAUH) was carried out on the final patho-logy reports of all children of the age of 17 years and below who either had ultrasound-guided renal biopsies or partial or total renal resections during the period between January 1995 and December 2008. All the specimens were reported by our pathology department. The most common clinical indication in the study group (242) is nephrotic syndrome (117, 48.3%), fol-lowed by systemic lupus erythromatosis for staging (30, 12.4%), nephritic syndrome (27, 11.1%) and renal mass for histological diagnosis (17, 7.0%). The most frequently reported pathological diagnosis was renal glomerulopathies, constituting 183 cases (n = 183, 75.6%) of the total number of pathology reports reviewed. Primary glomerulopathies were more common (n = 155, 88.4%) than the secondary ones (n = 28, 11.6%). The second most common pediatric renal pathology in this study was renal neoplasms (14, 5.7%). Vascular renal diseases and renal glomerulosclerosis ranked as the third pathological diagnosis in order of frequency in this study, with ten cases (10, 4.1%). The most common clinical indication for renal tissue sampling in this study is nephrotic syndrome and the most frequently detected pathology is glomerulonephritis. Larger multicentre studies are needed to further study pediatric nephropathies.
url http://www.sjkdt.org/article.asp?issn=1319-2442;year=2012;volume=23;issue=2;spage=377;epage=384;aulast=Abdullah
work_keys_str_mv AT laylasalehabdullah histopathologicalpatternofpediatricrenaldiseasesastudyfromauniversityhospitalinwesternsaudiarabia
_version_ 1716809053538091008