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Review
. 2015 Apr;139(4):547-51.
doi: 10.5858/arpa.2013-0660-RS.

Renal dysplasia

Affiliations
Free article
Review

Renal dysplasia

Rui-Yun Chen et al. Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2015 Apr.
Free article

Abstract

Renal dysplasia is an aberrant developmental disease usually diagnosed during the perinatal and childhood years. Prevalence is estimated at 0.1% of infants (via ultrasound screening) and 4% of fetuses and infants (via autopsy study). Occurrences may be combined with abnormalities in the collecting system or associated with complex syndromes. Histopathology shows primitive tubules surrounded by a fibromuscular collar. The differential diagnosis includes renal dysplasia, hypoplasia, and renal atrophy. Immunohistochemical expression of the paired box genes 2 and 8 (PAX2/8) and Wilms tumor 1 (WT1) is increased in the primitive ducts and fibromuscular collar, respectively. Renal dysplasia pathogenesis is not well understood, but may be caused by a nephron-inductive deficit due to ampullary inactivity or abnormal budding of the ureteric bud from the mesonephric duct. Either the PAX2 mutation only or cross-talk with the p53 pathway is involved in this deficit. Nephrectomy is the treatment of choice for symptomatic renal dysplasia.

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