Anti-glomerular Basement Membrane Disease (Goodpasture’s Syndrome)

The co-existence of acute glomerulonephritis and pulmonary alveolar haemorrhage

Aetiology

  • More common in men
  • Rare in children

Pathophysiology

  • Specific autoimmune disease caused by a type II antigen-antibody reaction leading to diffuse pulmonary haemorrhage, glomerulonephritis (and often acute kidney injury and chronic kidney disease)
  • There are circulating antiglomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) antibodies

Clinical presentation

  • Typically presents as acute kidney injury caused by a rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis, accompanied by pulmonary haemorrhage that may be life-threatening

Symptoms

  • Chills and fever, nausea and vomiting, weight loss, chest pain
  • Anaemia
  • Massive pulmonary haemorrhage, which can cause respiratory failure
  • Haematuria
  • Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis that may lead to acute kidney injury and volume overload
  • Arthralgia

Signs

  • Tachypnoea
  • Dyspnoea
  • Inspiratory crackles over lung bases
  • Cyanosis

Investigations

  • Bloods - FBC, U+Es, anti-GBM antibodies (diagnostic)
  • Urinalysis is typical of acute glomerulonephritis, with low-grade albuminuria, gross or microscopic haematuria, and red blood cell casts
  • CXR - transient patchy shadows due to intrapulmonary haemorrhage
  • Anti-GBM antibodies are diagnostic

Management

  • Plasmapheresis to remove circulating antibodies
  • Immunosuppression (prednisolone and cyclophosphamide) to prevent further antibody production