Expansion of Anticomplement Therapy Indications from Rare Genetic Disorders to Common Kidney Diseases

Annu Rev Med. 2024 Jan 29:75:189-204. doi: 10.1146/annurev-med-042921-102405. Epub 2023 Sep 5.

Abstract

Complement constitutes a major part of the innate immune system. The study of complement in human health has historically focused on infection risks associated with complement protein deficiencies; however, recent interest in the field has focused on overactivation of complement as a cause of immune injury and the development of anticomplement therapies to treat human diseases. The kidneys are particularly sensitive to complement injury, and anticomplement therapies for several kidney diseases have been investigated. Overactivation of complement can result from loss-of-function mutations in complement regulators; gain-of-function mutations in key complement proteins such as C3 and factor B; or autoantibody production, infection, or tissue stresses, such as ischemia and reperfusion, that perturb the balance of complement activation and regulation. Here, we provide a high-level review of the status of anticomplement therapies, with an emphasis on the transition from rare diseases to more common kidney diseases.

Keywords: C3 glomerulopathy; IgA nephropathy; atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome; chronic kidney disease; complement; lupus nephritis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Complement Inactivator Proteins
  • Humans
  • Kidney Diseases* / drug therapy
  • Kidney Diseases* / genetics
  • Mutation
  • Rare Diseases* / drug therapy
  • Rare Diseases* / genetics

Substances

  • anticomplement
  • Complement Inactivator Proteins