Midori Hasegawa, Fumiko Kondo, Koichiro Yamamoto, Kazutaka Murakami, Makoto Tomita, Kunihiro Nabeshima, Shigeru Nakai, Masao Kato, Atsushi Ohashi, Jiro Arai, Yoshiyuki Hiki, Junichi Ishii, Nobuhiko Emi, Satoshi Sugiyama, Yukio Yuzawa
THERAPEUTIC APHERESIS AND DIALYSIS, 14(5) 451-456, Oct, 2010
Aggressive removal of circulating free light chains (FLC) by blood purification accompanied by chemotherapy is a promising approach for the treatment of acute renal failure due to myeloma cast nephropathy. Plasma exchange has been performed to remove serum FLC; in order to examine an alternative strategy we performed hemodiafiltration using protein-leaking dialyzers for the treatment of dialysis-dependent acute renal failure due to myeloma cast nephropathy. In the first case with kappa-light chain cast nephropathy, the pre-treatment serum creatinine was 9.65 mg/dL, and the serum kappa-FLC was 27 100 mg/L. Plasma exchange or hemodiafiltration was performed from Monday to Friday during the first several weeks. Chemotherapy was started with high-dose dexamethasone and then switched to bortezomib plus dexamethasone. The mean removal rates of kappa-FLC were 45.8% (one plasma volume) and 66.9% (one-and-a-half plasma volumes) by plasma exchange. The removal rates of kappa-FLC by hemodiafiltration (66.9%, FB210UH beta; 71.6%, PES210D alpha; 75.2%, FXS220) were comparable to those by plasma exchange. In the second case with lambda-light chain cast nephropathy, the pre-treatment serum creatinine was 4.14 mg/dL, and the serum lambda-FLC was 4140 mg/L. The mean removal rates of lambda-FLC were 60.2% (FXS140) and 64.2% (FB210UH beta) by hemodiafiltration. Both cases became dialysis-independent. The combination of an intense blood purification regimen and bortezomib plus dexamethasone therapy appears to be an efficient approach to renal recovery. Hemodiafiltration using protein-leaking dialyzers could become an alternative to plasma exchange as a method of removing FLC.