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Featured researches published by Ronald J. Hogg.


Kidney International | 2009

The Oxford classification of IgA nephropathy: rationale, clinicopathological correlations, and classification

Daniel C. Cattran; Rosanna Coppo; H. Terence Cook; John Feehally; Ian S.D. Roberts; Stéphan Troyanov; Charles E. Alpers; Alessandro Amore; Jonathan Barratt; François Berthoux; Stephen M. Bonsib; Jan A. Bruijn; Giuseppe D'Amico; Steven N. Emancipator; Francesco Emma; Franco Ferrario; Fernando C. Fervenza; Sandrine Florquin; Agnes B. Fogo; Colin C. Geddes; Hermann Josef Groene; Mark Haas; Andrew M. Herzenberg; Prue Hill; Ronald J. Hogg; Stephen I-Hong Hsu; J. Charles Jennette; Kensuke Joh; Bruce A. Julian; Tetsuya Kawamura

IgA nephropathy is the most common glomerular disease worldwide, yet there is no international consensus for its pathological or clinical classification. Here a new classification for IgA nephropathy is presented by an international consensus working group. The goal of this new system was to identify specific pathological features that more accurately predict risk of progression of renal disease in IgA nephropathy, thus enabling both clinicians and pathologists to improve individual patient prognostication. In a retrospective analysis, sequential clinical data were obtained on 265 adults and children with IgA nephropathy who were followed for a median of 5 years. Renal biopsies from all patients were scored by pathologists blinded to the clinical data for pathological variables identified as reproducible by an iterative process. Four of these variables: (1) the mesangial hypercellularity score, (2) segmental glomerulosclerosis, (3) endocapillary hypercellularity, and (4) tubular atrophy/interstitial fibrosis were subsequently shown to have independent value in predicting renal outcome. These specific pathological features withstood rigorous statistical analysis even after taking into account all clinical indicators available at the time of biopsy as well as during follow-up. The features have prognostic significance and we recommended they be taken into account for predicting outcome independent of the clinical features both at the time of presentation and during follow-up. The value of crescents was not addressed due to their low prevalence in the enrolled cohort.


Kidney International | 2009

The Oxford classification of IgA nephropathy: pathology definitions, correlations, and reproducibility

Ian S.D. Roberts; H. Terence Cook; Stéphan Troyanov; Charles E. Alpers; Alessandro Amore; Jonathan Barratt; François Berthoux; Stephen M. Bonsib; Jan A. Bruijn; Daniel C. Cattran; Rosanna Coppo; Giuseppe D'Amico; Steven N. Emancipator; Francesco Emma; John Feehally; Franco Ferrario; Fernando C. Fervenza; Sandrine Florquin; Agnes B. Fogo; Colin C. Geddes; Hermann Josef Groene; Mark Haas; Andrew M. Herzenberg; Prue Hill; Ronald J. Hogg; Stephen I-Hong Hsu; J. Charles Jennette; Kensuke Joh; Bruce A. Julian; Tetsuya Kawamura

Pathological classifications in current use for the assessment of glomerular disease have been typically opinion-based and built on the expert assumptions of renal pathologists about lesions historically thought to be relevant to prognosis. Here we develop a unique approach for the pathological classification of a glomerular disease, IgA nephropathy, in which renal pathologists first undertook extensive iterative work to define pathologic variables with acceptable inter-observer reproducibility. Where groups of such features closely correlated, variables were further selected on the basis of least susceptibility to sampling error and ease of scoring in routine practice. This process identified six pathologic variables that could then be used to interrogate prognostic significance independent of the clinical data in IgA nephropathy (described in the accompanying article). These variables were (1) mesangial cellularity score; percentage of glomeruli showing (2) segmental sclerosis, (3) endocapillary hypercellularity, or (4) cellular/fibrocellular crescents; (5) percentage of interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy; and finally (6) arteriosclerosis score. Results for interobserver reproducibility of individual pathological features are likely applicable to other glomerulonephritides, but it is not known if the correlations between variables depend on the specific type of glomerular pathobiology. Variables identified in this study withstood rigorous pathology review and statistical testing and we recommend that they become a necessary part of pathology reports for IgA nephropathy. Our methodology, translating a strong evidence-based dataset into a working format, is a model for developing classifications of other types of renal disease.


Kidney International | 2011

Clinical trial of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in children and young adults

Debbie S. Gipson; Howard Trachtman; Frederick J. Kaskel; Tom Greene; Milena Radeva; Jennifer Gassman; Marva Moxey-Mims; Ronald J. Hogg; Sandra L. Watkins; Richard N. Fine; Susan L. Hogan; John P. Middleton; V. Matti Vehaskari; Patti A. Flynn; Leslie Powell; Suzanne Vento; June L. McMahan; Norman J. Siegel; Aaron L. Friedman

This NIH-funded multicenter randomized study of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) treatment compared the efficacy of a 12-month course of cyclosporine to a combination of oral pulse dexamethasone and mycophenolate mofetil in children and adults with steroid-resistant primary FSGS. Of the 192 patients enrolled, 138 were randomized to cyclosporine (72) or to mycophenolate/dexamethasone (66). The primary analysis compared the levels of an ordinal variable measuring remission during the first year. The odds ratio (0.59) for achieving at least a partial remission with mycophenolate/dexamethasone compared to cyclosporine was not significant. Partial or complete remission was achieved in 22 mycophenolate/dexamethasone- and 33 cyclosporine-treated patients at 12 months. The main secondary outcome, preservation of remission for 26 weeks following cessation of treatment, was not significantly different between these two therapies. During the entire 78 weeks of study, 8 patients treated with cyclosporine and 7 with mycophenolate/dexamethasone died or developed kidney failure. Thus, our study did not find a difference in rates of proteinuria remission following 12 months of cyclosporine compared to mycophenolate/dexamethasone in patients with steroid-resistant FSGS. However, the small sample size might have prevented detection of a moderate treatment effect.


Kidney International | 2010

The Oxford IgA nephropathy clinicopathological classification is valid for children as well as adults

Rosanna Coppo; Stéphan Troyanov; Roberta Camilla; Ronald J. Hogg; Daniel C. Cattran; H. Terence Cook; John Feehally; Ian S. Roberts; Alessandro Amore; Charles E. Alpers; Jonathan Barratt; François Berthoux; Stephen M. Bonsib; Jan A. Bruijn; Giuseppe D'Amico; Steven N. Emancipator; Francesco Emma; Franco Ferrario; Fernando C. Fervenza; Sandrine Florquin; Agnes B. Fogo; Colin C. Geddes; Hermann Josef Groene; Mark Haas; Andrew M. Herzenberg; Prue Hill; Stephen I-Hong Hsu; J. Charles Jennette; Kensuke Joh; Bruce A. Julian

To study the predictive value of biopsy lesions in IgA nephropathy in a range of patient ages we retrospectively analyzed the cohort that was used to derive a new classification system for IgA nephropathy. A total of 206 adults and 59 children with proteinuria over 0.5 g/24 h/1.73 m(2) and an eGFR of stage-3 or better were followed for a median of 69 months. At the time of biopsy, compared with adults children had a more frequent history of macroscopic hematuria, lower adjusted blood pressure, and higher eGFR but similar proteinuria. Although their outcome was similar to that of adults, children had received more immunosuppressants and achieved a lower follow-up proteinuria. Renal biopsies were scored for variables identified by an iterative process as reproducible and independent of other lesions. Compared with adults, children had significantly more mesangial and endocapillary hypercellularity, and less segmental glomerulosclerosis and tubulointerstitial damage, the four variables previously identified to predict outcome independent of clinical assessment. Despite these differences, our study found that the cross-sectional correlation between pathology and proteinuria was similar in adults and children. The predictive value of each specific lesion on the rate of decline of renal function or renal survival in IgA nephropathy was not different between children and adults.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2006

Clinical Trial to Evaluate Omega-3 Fatty Acids and Alternate Day Prednisone in Patients with IgA Nephropathy: Report from the Southwest Pediatric Nephrology Study Group

Ronald J. Hogg; Jeannette Lee; Nancy Nardelli; Julian Ba; Daniel C. Cattran; Bryson Waldo; Robert J. Wyatt; J. Charles Jennette; Richard K. Sibley; Keith Hyland; Lisa Fitzgibbons; Gladys Hirschman; James V. Donadio; Bruce J. Holub

This randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial evaluated the role of prednisone and omega 3 fatty acids (O3FA) in patients with IgA nephropathy. Entry criteria were (1) biopsy-proven IgA nephropathy, (2) estimated GFR > or = 50 ml/min per 1.73 m2, and (3) moderate to severe proteinuria. Thirty-three patients were randomly assigned to receive prednisone 60 mg/m2 every other day for 3 mo, then 40 mg/m2 every other day for 9 mo, then 30 mg/m2 every other day for 12 mo (prednisone group); 32 were randomly assigned to receive O3FA 4 g/d for 2 yr (1.88 g eicosapentaenoic acid, 1.48 g docosahexaenoic acid; O3FA group); and 31 were randomly assigned to receive placebo (placebo group). Most (73%) patients completed 2 yr of treatment. Randomly assigned patients who were hypertensive were given enalapril 2.5 to 40 mg/d. The primary end point was time to failure, defined as estimated GFR <60% of baseline. An overall significance level of 0.10 was used. The three groups were comparable at baseline except that the O3FA group had higher urine protein to creatinine (UP/C) ratios than the placebo group (P = 0.003). Neither treatment group showed benefit over the placebo group with respect to time to failure, with 14 patient failures overall (two in the prednisone group, eight in the O3FA group, and four in the placebo group). The primary factor associated with time to failure was higher baseline UP/C ratios (P = 0.009). Superiority of prednisone or O3FA over placebo in slowing progression of renal disease was not demonstrated in this study. However, the relatively short follow-up period, inequality of baseline UP/C ratios, and small numbers of patients precludes definitive conclusions.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2001

Evidence-based assessment of treatment options for children with IgA nephropathies

Robert J. Wyatt; Ronald J. Hogg

Abstract We present an evidence-based evaluation of published data on therapy for children with various presentations of the IgA nephropathies – idiopathic IgA nephropathy (IgAN) and Henoch-Schönlein purpura nephritis (HSPN). Particular attention has been paid to the outcome markers used in the studies reviewed, with the best evidence provided by markers highly associated with progressive renal failure. No treatment modality for either IgAN or HSPN in pediatric patients has been shown to be effective by a properly designed and administered randomized controlled trial (i.e., the highest level of evidence – level 1). Lower levels of evidence support the use of a variety of corticosteroid regimens, often in combination with other agents, although there are some conflicting studies in this area. No convincing evidence has been published to date to support the use of fish oil, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or tonsillectomy for the treatment of children with IgAN or HSPN. Well designed randomized controlled trials in children with the IgA nephropathies need to be undertaken.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2007

Serum levels of galactose-deficient IgA in children with IgA nephropathy and Henoch-Schönlein purpura

Keith K. Lau; Robert J. Wyatt; Zina Moldoveanu; Milan Tomana; Bruce A. Julian; Ronald J. Hogg; Jeannette Y. Lee; Wen-Qiang Huang; Jiri Mestecky; Jan Novak

IgA nephropathy and Henoch-Schönlein purpura nephritis (HSPN) are related diseases characterized by deposits of IgA1-containing immune complexes in the renal mesangium. Adult patients with IgA nephropathy have aberrantly glycosylated IgA1 (galactose-deficient O-linked glycans) in the circulation and renal deposits. However, IgA1 glycosylation has not been studied in pediatric patients with IgA nephropathy. Using our quantitative lectin enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test, we measured serum levels of galactose-deficient IgA1 of children with IgA nephropathy and HSPN and controls. Children with IgA nephropathy and HSPN had serum levels higher than those of healthy children or renal-disease controls with C1q nephropathy. Furthermore, lectin ELISA identified patients with HSPN whose clinical course mimicked that of IgA nephropathy. In summary, pediatric patients with IgA nephropathy and HSPN have an aberrancy in the glycosylation in IgA1 O-linked glycans that is similar to that in adults with IgA nephropathy.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Individual variation in lipidomic profiles of healthy subjects in response to omega-3 Fatty acids.

Malin L. Nording; Jun Yang; Katrin Georgi; Christine Hegedus Karbowski; J. Bruce German; Robert H. Weiss; Ronald J. Hogg; Johan Trygg; Bruce D. Hammock; Angela M. Zivkovic

Introduction Conflicting findings in both interventional and observational studies have resulted in a lack of consensus on the benefits of ω3 fatty acids in reducing disease risk. This may be due to individual variability in response. We used a multi-platform lipidomic approach to investigate both the consistent and inconsistent responses of individuals comprehensively to a defined ω3 intervention. Methods The lipidomic profile including fatty acids, lipid classes, lipoprotein distribution, and oxylipins was examined multi- and uni-variately in 12 healthy subjects pre vs. post six weeks of ω3 fatty acids (1.9 g/d eicosapentaenoic acid [EPA] and 1.5 g/d docosahexaenoic acid [DHA]). Results Total lipidomic and oxylipin profiles were significantly different pre vs. post treatment across all subjects (p=0.00007 and p=0.00002 respectively). There was a strong correlation between oxylipin profiles and EPA and DHA incorporated into different lipid classes (r2=0.93). However, strikingly divergent responses among individuals were also observed. Both ω3 and ω6 fatty acid metabolites displayed a large degree of variation among the subjects. For example, in half of the subjects, two arachidonic acid cyclooxygenase products, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and thromboxane B2 (TXB2), and a lipoxygenase product, 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-HETE) significantly decreased post intervention, whereas in the other half they either did not change or increased. The EPA lipoxygenase metabolite 12-hydroxyeicosapentaenoic acid (12-HEPE) varied among subjects from an 82% decrease to a 5,000% increase. Conclusions Our results show that certain defined responses to ω3 fatty acid intervention were consistent across all subjects. However, there was also a high degree of inter-individual variability in certain aspects of lipid metabolism. This lipidomic based phenotyping approach demonstrated that individual responsiveness to ω3 fatty acids is highly variable and measurable, and could be used as a means to assess the effectiveness of ω3 interventions in modifying disease risk and determining metabolic phenotype.


Metabolomics | 2012

Serum oxylipin profiles in IgA nephropathy patients reflect kidney functional alterations

Angela M. Zivkovic; Jun Yang; Katrin Georgi; Christine Hegedus; Malin L. Nording; Aifric O’Sullivan; J. Bruce German; Ronald J. Hogg; Robert H. Weiss; Curt Bay; Bruce D. Hammock

Immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN) is a leading cause of chronic kidney disease, frequently associated with hypertension and renal inflammation. ω-3 fatty acids eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) in fish oil (FO) improve kidney function in animal models, but have inconsistent metabolic effects in humans. Oxylipin profiles in serum from IgAN patients supplemented with either FO or corn oil (CO) placebo were analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry. EPA cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase metabolites, and EPA and DHA epoxides and diols were increased in response to FO supplementation, as were total epoxides and epoxide/diol ratios. Several of these metabolites were drivers of separation as assessed by multivariate analysis of FO patients pre- versus post-supplementation, including 17,18-dihydroxyeicosatrienoic acid, prostaglandin D3, prostagalandin E3, Resolvin E1, 12-hydroxyeicosapentaenoic acid, and 10(11)-epoxydocosapentaenoic acid. In patients whose proteinuria improved, plasma total oxylipins as well as several hydroxyoctadecadienoic acids, hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids, and leukotriene B4 metabolites were among the metabolites that were significantly lower than in patients whose proteinuria either did not improve or worsened. These data support the involvement of oxylipins in the inflammatory component of IgAN as well as the potential use of oxylipin profiles as biomarkers and for assessing responsiveness to ω-3 fatty acid supplementation in IgAN patients.


Hypertension | 2004

Is the Extrapolated Adult Dose of Fosinopril Safe and Effective in Treating Hypertensive Children

Jennifer S. Li; Katherine Y. Berezny; Rakhi Kilaru; Lydie Hazan; Ronald J. Portman; Ronald J. Hogg; Randall D. Jenkins; Prapti Kanani; Carol M. Cottrill; Tej K. Mattoo; Ludmila Zharkova; Ludmila Kozlova; Irit Weisman; David Deitchman; Robert M. Califf

We evaluated the efficacy, safety, and dose–response relationship of fosinopril in children aged 6 to 16 years with hypertension or high-normal blood pressure with an associated medical condition requiring treatment. The study was a prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted in 78 clinical sites in the United States, Russia, and Israel. There were 4 phases: a screening phase of 10 days maximum, a 4-week dose–response phase, a placebo withdrawal phase of 2 weeks maximum, and a 52-week open-label safety phase. The primary objective of the dose–response phase was to determine whether low (0.1 mg/kg), medium (0.3 mg/kg), or high (0.6 mg/kg) doses of fosinopril based on established adult dosing affect trough seated systolic blood pressure. During the dose–response phase, all 3 doses were equally effective in lowering systolic blood pressure. During the placebo withdrawal phase, there was an adjusted mean systolic blood pressure increase of 5.2 mm Hg for the placebo group and 1.5 mm Hg for the fosinopril group, a net withdrawal effect of 3.7 mm Hg (P=0.013). Fosinopril was well tolerated; serious adverse events occurred infrequently and were generally not attributed to fosinopril. Because children appear to be more sensitive to lower doses of fosinopril than adults, starting doses for children should be ≤0.1 mg/kg.

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J. Charles Jennette

St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center

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Robert J. Wyatt

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Alessandro Amore

Boston Children's Hospital

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Bruce A. Julian

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Howard Trachtman

St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center

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Marva Moxey-Mims

Food and Drug Administration

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