• Q. J. Med. · Apr 1985

    The clinical spectrum of acute glomerulonephritis and lung haemorrhage (Goodpasture's syndrome).

    • S Holdsworth, N Boyce, N M Thomson, and R C Atkins.
    • Q. J. Med. 1985 Apr 1; 55 (216): 75-86.

    AbstractThe aetiology, clinical features and outcome of 40 patients presenting with Goodpasture's syndrome (glomerulonephritis with haemoptysis and pulmonary infiltrates) are reviewed. The diseases of the patients studied could be divided into three groups: antiglomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) antibody-induced disease (7/40); systemic vasculitis (22/40) and idiopathic Goodpasture's syndrome (i.e. no systemic disease or anti-GBM antibody detected) (11/40). Overall mortality was 57.5 per cent (anti-GBM disease 4/7; systemic vasculitis 15/22; and idiopathic Goodpasture's syndrome 4/11). Most patients died of disease progression or infection. End-stage renal failure developed in 26 patients (anti-GBM (7), vasculitis (14) and idiopathic Goodpasture's syndrome (5). End-stage renal failure developed in 23 of 24 patients presenting with a creatinine of greater than 600 microM/l regardless of the aetiology of Goodpasture's syndrome or treatment used. Review of renal histology showed that all had proliferative nephritis, with 80 per cent of patients having more than 30 per cent crescents. Thus Goodpasture's syndrome was associated with a wide variety of underlying disease. It had a poor prognosis, with the degree of renal impairment at presentation, the extent of crescent formation and the nature of the underlying disease being the major determinants of outcome.

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