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Featured researches published by Monika Miklaszewska.


Quality of Life Research | 2013

Perception of health-related quality of life in children with chronic kidney disease by the patients and their caregivers: Multicentre national study results

Katarzyna Kiliś-Pstrusińska; Anna Medyńska; Irena Bałasz Chmielewska; Ryszard Grenda; Agnieszka Kluska-Jóźwiak; Beata Leszczyńska; Julita Niedomagała; Ilona Olszak-Szot; Monika Miklaszewska; Maria Szczepańska; Marcin Tkaczyk; Agnieszka Urzykowska; Anna Wasilewska; Katarzyna Zachwieja; Maria Małgorzata Zajączkowska; Helena Ziółkowska; Ilona Zagożdżon; Danuta Zwolińska

ObjectiveThe aim of the study was to analyse the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in Polish children with chronic kidney disease (CKD) dependant on the CKD stage, treatment modality and selected social life elements in families of the patients. Furthermore, potential differences between self-report and parent/proxy reports and the factors influencing them were assessed.MethodsA total of 203 CKD children (on haemodialysis (HD), peritoneal dialysis (PD) and conservative treatment (CT)) and their 388 parent/proxies were enrolled into a cross-sectional national study. The demographic and social data were evaluated. We used the Paediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 Generic Core Scales to assess the HRQoL in children.ResultsHealth-related quality of life scores for all CKD groups were significantly lower in all domains compared with population norms, the lowest one being in the HD group. In CT children, HRQoL did not depend on the CKD stage. Both parents assessed the HRQoL of their children differently depending on their involvement in the care. There are differences between the HRQoL scores of the children and their parents.ConclusionThe HRQoL in children with CKD is lower than in healthy children. This is already observed in the early stages of the disease. The disease itself influences the child’s mental state. Children on HD require special support on account of the lowest demonstrated overall HRQoL. Children’s lower rating of the quality of life observed by their parents may render the patients unmotivated and adversely affect their adjustment to life in later years. It may also create conflicts between the parents and the children.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2016

Oxidative Stress Biomarkers and Left Ventricular Hypertrophy in Children with Chronic Kidney Disease

Dorota Drożdż; Przemko Kwinta; Krystyna Sztefko; Zbigniew Kordon; Tomasz Drożdż; Monika Łątka; Monika Miklaszewska; Katarzyna Zachwieja; Andrzej Rudziński; Jacek A. Pietrzyk

Cardiovascular diseases remain the most frequent cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). The aim of the study was to assess the association between oxidative stress biomarkers and cardiovascular risk factors and left ventricular hypertrophy in children with CKD. Material and Methods. The studied group consisted of 65 patients aged 1.4–18.6 (mean 11.2) years with stages 1 to 5 CKD. Serum oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL), protein carbonyl group, creatinine, cystatin C, albumin, lipids, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, insulin, plasma renin activity, and aldosterone levels were measured. Patients were divided into groups depending on CKD stage. Anthropometric measurements, ambulatory blood pressure (BP) measurements, and echocardiography with left ventricular mass (LVM) calculation were performed. Results. Serum oxLDL strongly correlated with creatinine (R = 0.246; p = 0.048), cystatin C (R = 0.346; p = 0.006), total cholesterol (R = 0.500; p < 0.001), triglycerides (R = 0.524; p < 0.001), low-density lipoprotein concentrations (R = 0.456; p < 0.001), and 24 hour BP values of systolic (R = 0.492; p = 0.002), diastolic (R = 0.515; p < 0.001), and mean arterial pressure (R = 0.537; p < 0.001). A significant correlation between oxLDL levels and LVM z-scores (R = 0.299; p = 0.016) was found. Conclusions. Hypertension and dyslipidemia correlated with lipid oxidation in children with CKD. oxLDLs seem to be valuable markers of oxidative stress in CKD patients, correlating with left ventricular hypertrophy.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2015

Erratum to: Relationship between serum IgA/C3 ratio and severity of histological lesions using the Oxford classification in children with IgA nephropathy

Małgorzata Mizerska-Wasiak; Jadwiga Małdyk; Agnieszka Rybi-Szumińska; Anna Wasilewska; Monika Miklaszewska; Jacek J. Pietrzyk; Agnieszka Firszt-Adamczyk; Roman Stankiewicz; Beata Bieniaś; Małgorzata Zajączkowska; Katarzyna Gadomska-Prokop; Ryszard Grenda; Agnieszka Pukajło-Marczyk; Danuta Zwolińska; Maria Szczepańska; Agnieszka Turczyn; Maria Roszkowska-Blaim

Background The aim of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of serum immunoglobulin A/complement factor 3 (IgA/C3) ratio for predicting histological severity of kidney lesions in children with IgA nephropathy (IgAN) based on World Health Organization (WHO) and the Oxford classification (OC).


Advances in Medical Sciences | 2015

Which equations should and which should not be employed in calculating eGFR in children

Katarzyna Zachwieja; Przemyslaw Korohoda; Joanna Kwinta-Rybicka; Monika Miklaszewska; Anna Moczulska; Jolanta Bugajska; Joanna Berska; Dorota Drozdz; Jacek A. Pietrzyk

PURPOSE We assessed the reliability of calculating eGFR in children as compared to the iohexol disappearance test (GFR-I), which was performed 417 times in 353 children aged 2 and more. MATERIAL/METHODS eGFR was estimated with equations based on serum creatinine: Schwartz (1: eGFR-Scr), Cockroft-Gault (2: eGFR-CG) and MDRD (3: eGFR-MDRD), and on creatinine clearance (4: eGFR-U), or relying on serum cystatin C: Hoeck (5: eGFR-H), Bokenkamp (6: eGFR-B) and Filler (7: eGFR-F), and on the three Schwartz markers (8: eGFR-S3M). Mean relative error (RE), correlation (R), Bland-Altman analysis and accuracy of GFR-I were studied in all patients and in subgroups: at GFR<60ml/min/1.73m(2); in children aged ≤12 and >12. RESULTS The results by eGFR-Scr, eGFR-S3M demonstrated no statistical difference to GFR-I at GFR<60ml/min/1.73m(2), but underestimated eGFR at higher filtration values by 11.6±15.1% and 19.1±16.4, respectively (p<0.0000). The eGFR-B, eGFR-F and eGFR-MDRD equations illustrated important overestimation of reference GFR results (RE: 84±44.2%; 29.5±27.9%, 35.6±62%; p<0.0000 for all). The MDRD and C-G formulas showed statistically better consistency in children aged >12. A good agreement was achieved by the eGFR-H equation (5.1±21.9%; p<0.0000; R=0.78). CONCLUSIONS (1) Schwartz equations show a good conformity at GFR<60ml/min/1.73m(2), but underestimate the results at higher GFR values. (2) The Bokenkamp equation with original coefficient should not be employed in children. (3) The use of the Hoeck formula in all children and C-G and MDRD formula in children aged >12 is possible. (4) The error of eGFR calculations increases at higher GFR values.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017

The Phenotypic Spectrum of Nephropathies Associated with Mutations in Diacylglycerol Kinase ε

Karolis Azukaitis; Eva Simkova; Mohammad Abdul Majid; Matthias Galiano; Kerstin Benz; Kerstin Amann; Clemens Bockmeyer; Radha Gajjar; Kevin E.C. Meyers; Hae Il Cheong; Bärbel Lange-Sperandio; Therese Jungraithmayr; Véronique Frémeaux-Bacchi; Carsten Bergmann; Monika Miklaszewska; Dorottya Csuka; Zoltán Prohászka; Patrick Gipson; Matthew G. Sampson; Mathieu Lemaire; Franz Schaefer

The recent discovery of mutations in the gene encoding diacylglycerol kinase ε (DGKE) identified a novel pathophysiologic mechanism leading to HUS and/or MPGN. We report ten new patients from eight unrelated kindreds with DGKE nephropathy. We combined these cases with all previously published cases to characterize the phenotypic spectrum and outcomes of this new disease entity. Most patients presented with HUS accompanied by proteinuria, whereas a subset of patients exhibited clinical and histologic patterns of MPGN without TMA. We also report the first two patients with clinical and histologic HUS/MPGN overlap. DGKE-HUS typically manifested in the first year of life but was not exclusively limited to infancy, and viral triggers frequently preceded HUS episodes. We observed signs of complement activation in some patients with DGKE-HUS, but the role of complement activation remains unclear. Most patients developed a slowly progressive proteinuric nephropathy: 80% of patients did not have ESRD within 10 years of diagnosis. Many patients experienced HUS remission without specific treatment, and a few patients experienced HUS recurrence despite complete suppression of the complement pathway. Five patients received renal allografts, with no post-transplant recurrence reported. In conclusion, we did not observe a clear genotype-phenotype correlation in patients with DGKE nephropathy, suggesting additional factors mediating phenotypic heterogeneity. Furthermore, the benefits of anti-complement therapy are questionable but renal transplant may be a feasible option in the treatment of patients with this condition.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2016

Long-term renal outcome in children with OCRL mutations: retrospective analysis of a large international cohort

Marcin Zaniew; Arend Bökenkamp; Marcin Kołbuc; Claudio La Scola; Federico Baronio; Anna Niemirska; Maria Szczepańska; Julia Bürger; Angela La Manna; Monika Miklaszewska; Anna Rogowska-Kalisz; Jutta Gellermann; Argyroula Zampetoglou; Anna Wasilewska; Magdalena Roszak; Jerzy Moczko; Aleksandra Krzemień; Dariusz Runowski; Grzegorz Siteń; Iga Załuska-Leśniewska; Patrizia Fonduli; Franca Zurrida; Fabio Paglialonga; Zoran Gucev; Dusan Paripovic; Rina R Rus; Valerie Said-Conti; Lisa Sartz; Woo Yeong Chung; Se Jin Park

Background Lowe syndrome (LS) and Dent-2 disease (DD2) are disorders associated with mutations in the OCRL gene and characterized by progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD). Here, we aimed to investigate the long-term renal outcome and identify potential determinants of CKD and its progression in children with these tubulopathies. Methods Retrospective analyses were conducted of clinical and genetic data in a cohort of 106 boys (LS: 88 and DD2: 18). For genotype-phenotype analysis, we grouped mutations according to their type and localization. To investigate progression of CKD we used survival analysis by Kaplan-Meier method using stage 3 CKD as the end-point. Results Median estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was lower in the LS group compared with DD2 (58.8 versus 87.4 mL/min/1.73 m2, P < 0.01). CKD stage II-V was found in 82% of patients, of these 58% and 28% had moderate-to-severe CKD in LS and DD2, respectively. Three patients (3%), all with LS, developed stage 5 of CKD. Survival analysis showed that LS was also associated with a faster CKD progression than DD2 (P < 0.01). On multivariate analysis, eGFR was dependent only on age (b = -0.46, P < 0.001). Localization, but not type of mutations, tended to correlate with eGFR. There was also no significant association between presence of nephrocalcinosis, hypercalciuria, proteinuria and number of adverse clinical events and CKD. Conclusions CKD is commonly found in children with OCRL mutations. CKD progression was strongly related to the underlying diagnosis but did not associate with clinical parameters, such as nephrocalcinosis or proteinuria.


Pediatric Transplantation | 2015

Favorable four‐yr outcome after renal transplantation in a patient with complement factor H antibody and CFHR1/CFHR3 gene mutation‐associated HUS

Ryszard Grenda; Wioletta Jarmużek; Jacek Rubik; Sylwester Prokurat; Monika Miklaszewska; Dorota Drożdż; Katarzyna Zachwieja; Gianluigi Ardissino; Johannes Hofer

aHUS is a clinical challenge for successful renal transplantation. Case report: A 14‐yr‐old girl lost her kidneys at the age of 7, due to CFH antibodies and CFH‐related protein (CFHR1/CFHR3) homozygous deletion‐associated aHUS. CFH, CFI, and MCP gene mutations were excluded. The patient was a candidate for renal transplantation despite persistent presence of CFH antibodies (up to 539 AU/mL). Treatment with MMF, IVIG, and repeated PF (n = 8) was introduced while being placed on urgent waiting list. Three years after aHUS onset, the patient underwent the deceased donor renal transplantation “under cover” of PF, as PF was performed directly prior to surgery and, then, PFs were repeated up to overall 14 sessions. Quadruple immunosuppression (basiliximab + tacrolimus + MMF + prednisolone) was used. Moderate symptoms of aHUS (hemolysis, low platelets, and low C3) were present within first seven days post‐transplant and then normalized with PF therapy. The patient remained stable during four yr of further follow‐up after transplantation. Conclusion: Specific pre‐ and post‐transplant management allowed successful renal transplantation in a CFH antibody‐positive patient.


Kidney & Blood Pressure Research | 2014

Acute kidney injury in a single pediatric intensive care unit in Poland: a retrospective study.

Monika Miklaszewska; P. Korohoda; Alina Sobczak; Anna Horbaczewska; Agata Filipiak; Katarzyna Zachwieja; Krzysztof Kobylarz; Marcin Tkaczyk; Dorota Drożdż; Jacek A. Pietrzyk

Background/Aims: The recent improvements of management of patients in pediatric intensive care units (PICU) are associated with improved outcome. However, this decrease in mortality is associated with an increased number of children with acute kidney injury (AKI), especially in patients with multiorgan failure. Methods: The report presents a retrospective analysis of 25 cases of AKI (assessed based on the pRIFLE criteria) in PICU within 7 years. Results: AKI was diagnosed in 1.24% of all hospitalized children. AKI percentage duration (as compared to the total hospitalization time) in the children who died vs. the survivors was 79.55% vs. 46.19%, respectively (p<0.05). The mortality rate of AKI patients was 40% which was 4.4-times higher as compared to the total mortality rate in PICU. The final cumulative survival ratio (FCSR) of patients meeting the oliguria criterion (which was met in 48% of AKI patients) was 37% vs. 49% in non-oliguric children. Averaged urine output values in the first week of hospitalization in the deceased vs. survivors were 1.49 vs. 2.57 ml/kg/h, respectively (p<0.05). Conclusions: Oliguria should not be considered as a sensitive parameter for AKI diagnosing in children below one year of age. A decreased mean urine output in the first week of PICU hospitalization (less than 1.4 ml/kg/h) should be considered as a poor prognostic factor. In many cases AKI was diagnosed too infrequently and too late.


Scandinavian Journal of Urology and Nephrology | 2012

Anaemia treatment in chronically dialysed children: a multicentre nationwide observational study

Anna Jander; Ryszard WierciŃski; Irena Bałasz-Chmielewska; Monika Miklaszewska; Katarzyna Zachwieja; Halina Borzęcka; Jacek Zachwieja; Irena Olszak-Szot; Dariusz Kubicki; Helena Ziółkowska; Jacek Rubik; Maria SzczepaŃska; Dariusz Runowski; Wojciech Fendler; Marcin Tkaczyk

Abstract Objective.Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) are applied as a standard therapy in children with anaemia in chronic kidney disease. The aim of this study was to describe the efficacy and details of ESA treatment in a population of dialysed children in Poland. Material and methods. The study had a prospective observational design and was performed in 12 dialysis centres. The study group comprised 117 dialysed children with a mean age at enrolment of 165.33 (97.18–196.45) months. Results.Dialysed children were treated mostly with epoietin beta and darbepoietin. The mean dose of ESA was 99 (68–147) U/kg/week with a significant difference between patients on peritoneal dialysis [83 (54–115)] and haemodialysis [134 (103–186)] (p < 0.0001). The mean haemoglobin of all the time-point tests during 6 months was 10.91 ± 1.18 g/dl. The efficacy of anaemia treatment was unsatisfactory in 52% of subjects. In multivariate analysis, initial haemoglobin level <10 g/l, any infection, younger age at first dialysis, malnutrition and inadequate ESA dosage remained significant predictors of anaemia. Conclusions.The study revealed that anaemia treatment in Polish children is unsatisfactory. Late commencement of the treatment, inadequate dosing, malnutrition and infections could constitute risk factors for therapy failure.


Renal Failure | 2016

Modification of the Schwartz equations for children increases their accuracy at eGFR > 60 mL/min/1.73 m2

Katarzyna Zachwieja; Przemyslaw Korohoda; Joanna Kwinta-Rybicka; Monika Miklaszewska; Anna Moczulska; Jolanta Bugajska; Joanna Berska; Dorota Drozdz; Jacek A. Pietrzyk

Abstract Aim: Estimation of eGFR in children with normal kidney function using the Schwartz equations results in underestimating real GFR. Materials and methods: We propose modification of three Schwartz equations – two based on creatinine concentration (eGFRScrBS bedside) and (eGFRScr) and one 3-marker based on creatinine, urea and cystatin C concentrations (eGFRS3M). The iohexol test (reference method) was performed 417 times in 353 children >2 years with mean GFR: 98 ± 31.6 ml/min/1.73m2. The assessment included also the Filler and Zappitelli equations. The modification was performed using methods: (1) based on equation, eGFRcor = a [eGFR − T] + T, where T = 50, if eGFR > T, and a equals for: eGFRScrBS 1.4043, for eGFRScr 2.0048, for eGFRS3M 1.2951, and (2) based on correction of all coefficients of the original equation. Results: For comparison of all the results and for children with GFR< 60, 60-90, 90-135 and > 135 ml/min/1.73m2 the correlation coefficient, relative error (RE) and root mean square relative error (RMSRE) was employed and revealed improvement of RE from 25.9 to 6.8 and 3.9% (depending on the correction method) for eGFRScr; from 19 to 8.1 and 3.9% for eGFRScrBS and: from 11.6% to 2.0 and 2.3% for eGFRS3M (respectively). The RMSRE values changed from 30 to 21.3 and 19.8% for eGFRScr, from 25.1 to 21.6 and 19.8% for eGFRScrBS and from 19.1 to 15.8 and 15.3 % for eGFRS3M. Conclusions: Modifications of Schwartz equations at GFR > 60 ml/min/1.73m2 significantly improves the accuracy of calculating eGFR. The 3-markers equation is more accurate and should be employed frequently.

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Katarzyna Zachwieja

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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Marcin Tkaczyk

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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Anna Wasilewska

Medical University of Białystok

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Maria Szczepańska

University of Silesia in Katowice

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Danuta Zwolińska

Wrocław Medical University

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Agnieszka Turczyn

Medical University of Warsaw

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Dorota Drozdz

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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