Michalis Zavros
Nicosia General Hospital
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Featured researches published by Michalis Zavros.
Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011
Yiannis Athanasiou; Konstantinos Voskarides; Daniel P. Gale; Loukas Damianou; Charalampos Patsias; Michalis Zavros; Patrick H. Maxwell; H. T. Cook; Panayiota Demosthenous; Andreas Hadjisavvas; Kyriacos Kyriacou; Ioanna Zouvani; Alkis Pierides; Constantinos Deltas
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Complement factor H and related proteins (CFHR) are key regulators of the alternative complement pathway, where loss of function mutations lead to a glomerulopathy with isolated mesangial C3 deposits without immunoglobulins. Gale et al. (12) reported on 26 patients with the first familial, hematuric glomerulopathy caused by a founder mutation in the CFHR5 gene in patients of Cypriot descent living in the United Kingdom. CFHR5 nephropathy is clinically characterized by continuous microscopic hematuria whereas some patients present with additional episodes of synpharyngitic macrohematuria, associated with infection and pyrexia. A subgroup of patients, particularly men, develop additional proteinuria, hypertension, and chronic renal disease or ESRD. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS We herewith expand significantly on the study by Gale et al., reporting on histologic, molecular, and clinical findings in 91 patients from 16 families with the same founder mutation. RESULTS Eighty-two patients (90%) exhibited microscopic hematuria; 51 (62%), exhibited only microscopic hematuria, whereas the remaining 31 additionally had proteinuria (38%); 28 proteinuric patients developed chronic renal failure (CRF). Among carriers of CFHR5 mutation aged >50 years, 80% of the men and 21% of the women developed CRF; 18 developed ESRD (14 men [78%], 4 women [22%]). CONCLUSIONS The diagnosis of CFHR5-related, isolated C3 glomerulopathy was established in 2009 using newly described mutation analysis after decades of follow-up with unclear diagnoses, occasionally confused with IgA nephropathy. This larger patient cohort establishes the clinical course, significant variable expressivity, and marked gender difference regarding the development of CRF and ESRD.
Journal of Medical Case Reports | 2014
Andreas Kourouklaris; Kyriakos Ioannou; Ioannis Athanasiou; Alexia Panagidou; Kiproulla Demetriou; Michalis Zavros
IntroductionDifferential diagnosis of thrombotic microangiopathies can be difficult. Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome is a rare, life-threatening disease caused by uncontrolled chronic activation of alternative complement pathway, resulting in microvascular thrombosis, organ ischemia and damage. Prognosis is poor: up to 65 percent of patients require dialysis or have kidney damage of varying severity or die despite plasma exchange/plasma infusion treatment.Case presentationWe describe the case of a 23-year-old woman of Hellenic origin who, after a preeclampsia-induced premature delivery, developed thrombotic microangiopathy with renal failure, tonicoclonic seizures, anasarca edema and hypertension. Intensive plasma exchange was initiated twice daily, in parallel to dialysis for one month. Three months later, our patient was discharged with nondialysis-dependent renal failure and without signs of hemolysis. Three months after discharge our patient was readmitted with cardiomyopathy (left ventricular ejection fraction of 25 percent) and signs and symptoms of thrombotic microangiopathy. Our patient was diagnosed with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome and was started on eculizumab (a complement inhibitor), which improved clinical and laboratory parameters. However, a transient pause in treatment resulted in thrombotic microangiopathy relapse, which was rapidly blocked with reintroduction of eculizumab treatment. During long-term eculizumab treatment, thrombotic microangiopathy manifestations were inhibited and renal and cardiac function restored, with no need for other invasive treatments.ConclusionsEstablishing the diagnosis of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome in patients presenting with thrombotic microangiopathy is challenging since common symptoms are shared with other conditions like Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli hemolytic uremic syndrome and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. The described case illustrates the complexity and importance of rapid diagnosis in a rare disease and the need for appropriate and specific treatment for best long-term outcomes.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Konstantinos Voskarides; Charalambos Stefanou; Myrtani Pieri; Panayiota Demosthenous; Kyriakos Felekkis; Maria Arsali; Yiannis Athanasiou; Dimitris Xydakis; Kostas Stylianou; Eugenios Daphnis; Giorgos Goulielmos; Petros Loizou; Judith Savige; Martin Höhne; Linus A. Völker; Thomas Benzing; Patrick H. Maxwell; Daniel P. Gale; Mathias Gorski; Carsten A. Böger; Barbara Kollerits; Florian Kronenberg; Bernhard Paulweber; Michalis Zavros; Alkis Pierides; Constantinos Deltas
Background Recent data emphasize that thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN) should not be viewed as a form of benign familial hematuria since chronic renal failure (CRF) and even end-stage renal disease (ESRD), is a possible development for a subset of patients on long-term follow-up, through the onset of focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). We hypothesize that genetic modifiers may explain this variability of symptoms. Methods We looked in silico for potentially deleterious functional SNPs, using very strict criteria, in all the genes significantly expressed in the slit diaphragm (SD). Two variants were genotyped in a cohort of well-studied adult TBMN patients from 19 Greek-Cypriot families, with a homogeneous genetic background. Patients were categorized as “Severe” or “Mild”, based on the presence or not of proteinuria, CRF and ESRD. A larger pooled cohort (HEMATURIA) of 524 patients, including IgA nephropathy patients, was used for verification. Additionally, three large general population cohorts [Framingham Heart Study (FHS), KORAF4 and SAPHIR] were used to investigate if the NEPH3-V353M variant has any renal effect in the general population. Results and conclusions Genotyping for two high-scored variants in 103 TBMN adult patients with founder mutations who were classified as mildly or severely affected, pointed to an association with variant NEPH3-V353M (filtrin). This promising result prompted testing in the larger pooled cohort (HEMATURIA), indicating an association of the 353M variant with disease severity under the dominant model (p = 3.0x10-3, OR = 6.64 adjusting for gender/age; allelic association: p = 4.2x10-3 adjusting for patients’ kinships). Subsequently, genotyping 6,531 subjects of the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) revealed an association of the homozygous 353M/M genotype with microalbuminuria (p = 1.0x10-3). Two further general population cohorts, KORAF4 and SAPHIR confirmed the association, and a meta-analysis of all three cohorts (11,258 individuals) was highly significant (p = 1.3x10-5, OR = 7.46). Functional studies showed that Neph3 homodimerization and Neph3-Nephrin heterodimerization are disturbed by variant 353M. Additionally, 353M was associated with differential activation of the unfolded protein response pathway, when overexpressed in stressed cultured undifferentiated podocyte cells, thus attesting to its functional significance. Genetics and functional studies support a “rare variant-strong effect” role for NEPH3-V353M, by exerting a negative modifier effect on primary glomerular hematuria. Additionally, genetics studies provide evidence for a role in predisposing homozygous subjects of the general population to micro-albuminuria.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Konstantinos Voskarides; Panayiota Demosthenous; Louiza Papazachariou; Maria Arsali; Yiannis Athanasiou; Michalis Zavros; Kostas Stylianou; Dimitris Xydakis; Eugenios Daphnis; Daniel P. Gale; Patrick H. Maxwell; Avraam Elia; Cristian Pattaro; Alkis Pierides; Constantinos Deltas
Familial hematuria (FH) is explained by at least four different genes (see below). About 50% of patients develop late proteinuria and chronic kidney disease (CKD). We hypothesized that MYH9/APOL1, two closely linked genes associated with CKD, may be associated with adverse progression in FH. Our study included 102 thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN) patients with three known COL4A3/COL4A4 mutations (cohort A), 83 CFHR5/C3 glomerulopathy patients (cohort B) with a single CFHR5 mutation and 15 Alport syndrome patients (cohort C) with two known COL4A5 mild mutations, who were categorized as “Mild” (controls) or “Severe” (cases), based on renal manifestations. E1 and S1 MYH9 haplotypes and variant rs11089788 were analyzed for association with disease phenotype. Evidence for association with “Severe” progression in CFHR5 nephropathy was found with MYH9 variant rs11089788 and was confirmed in an independent FH cohort, D (cumulative p value = 0.001, odds ratio = 3.06, recessive model). No association was found with APOL1 gene. Quantitative Real time PCR did not reveal any functional significance for the rs11089788 risk allele. Our results derive additional evidence supporting previous reports according to which MYH9 is an important gene per se, predisposing to CKD, suggesting its usefulness as a prognostic marker for young hematuric patients.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2009
Alkis Pierides; Konstantinos Voskarides; Yiannis Athanasiou; Kyriacos Ioannou; Loukas Damianou; Maria Arsali; Michalis Zavros; Michael Pierides; Vasilios Vargemezis; Charalambos Patsias; Ioanna Zouvani; Avraam Elia; Kyriacos Kyriacou; Constantinos Deltas
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2017
Eleni Frangou; Andreas Soloukides; Isavella Savva; Agathi Varnavidou; Michalis Zavros; Constantinos Deltas; Vassilis G. Hadjianastassiou
Genetic Testing and Molecular Biomarkers | 2015
Yiannis Athanasiou; Konstantinos Voskarides; Anthi Chatzikyriakidou; Anastasia Ignatiou; Panayiota Demosthenous; Avraam Elia; Michalis Zavros; Ioannis Georgiou; Alkis Pierides; Constantinos Deltas
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2013
Cristian Pattaro; Konstantinos Voskarides; Charalambos Stefanou; Judith Savige; Thomas Benzing; Daniel P. Gale; Eugenios Daphnis; Michalis Zavros; Alkis Pierides; Constantinos Deltas
In: (Proceedings) 50th European-Renal-Association - European-Dialysis-and-Transplant-Association (ERA-EDTA) Congress. (pp. p. 68). OXFORD UNIV PRESS (2013) | 2013
Konstantinos Voskarides; C Stefanou; Judy Savige; T Benzing; Daniel P. Gale; Eugenios Daphnis; Michalis Zavros; Alkis Pierides; Constantinos Deltas
In: (pp. pp. 1079-1089). (2013) | 2013
Matthew C. Pickering; Vivette D. D'Agati; Carla M. Nester; Richard J.H. Smith; Mark Haas; Gerald B. Appel; Charles E. Alpers; Ingeborg M. Bajema; Camille L. Bedrosian; Michael C. Braun; Mittie K. Doyle; Fadi Fakhouri; Fernando C. Fervenza; Agnes B. Fogo; Frémeaux-Bacchi; Daniel P. Gale; E. Goicoechea de Jorge; G Griffin; Claire L. Harris; Vm Holers; Steven G. Johnson; Peter Lavin; Nicholas Medjeral-Thomas; B. Paul Morgan; Cynthia C. Nast; Laure Hélène Noël; Dk Peters; S. Rodríguez de Córdoba; Aude Servais; Sanjeev Sethi