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Major Groups of Cystic Nephropathies

Disorder

Clinical Features

Autosomal dominant

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD)

Flank and abdominal pain

Hematuria

Hypertension

Large kidneys with multiple bilateral cysts

Extrarenal cysts (liver, pancreas, intestine)

Cerebral aneurysms

Diverticulosis

Abdominal wall hernias

ESKD during adulthood

Branchio-oto-renal syndrome (BOR syndrome or Melnick-Fraser syndrome)

Branchial fistulas and cysts

Preauricular pits or tags

Hearing loss

Renal aplasia and cysts

Familial renal hamartomas

Primary hyperparathyroidism

Ossifying fibromas of the jaw

New hamartoma which can manifest as cysts

Autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial kidney disease (ADTKD)

Small to normal-sized kidneys

Polydipsia and polyuria

Absent-to-mild proteinuria

Bland urinary sediment

No severe hypertension during early stages

Nocturia or enuresis in children

ESKD during adulthood

Gout for most variants

Renal medullary cysts

Tuberous sclerosis

Benign tumors of the brain, kidneys, and skin

Angiomyolipomas of the kidneys, which can appear like cysts

Von Hippel–Lindau disease

Hemangioblastoma proliferation in the retina, brain, spinal cord, and adrenal glands

Renal cell carcinoma and cysts

Pheochromocytoma

Autosomal recessive

Alström syndrome

Obesity

Type 2 diabetes mellitus

Retinitis pigmentosa

Renal cysts

Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease

Large kidneys with multiple bilateral cysts

Hepatic fibrosis

Hypertension

ESKD during childhood

Bardet-Biedl syndrome

Male hypogonadism

Intellectual disability

Retinopathy

Obesity

Polydactyly

Renal cysts

Ellis–van Creveld syndrome

Short-limb dwarfism

Polydactyly

Heart defects frequently

Renal cysts

Ivemark syndrome

Spleen agenesis

Cyanotic heart disease

Gut malrotation

Renal cysts

Jeune syndrome (asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy)

Dwarfism involving the chest, arms, and legs

Microcystic renal disease

Joubert syndrome

Intellectual disability

Hypotonia

Irregular breathing

Eye movement abnormalities

Renal cysts and liver disease in some individuals

Meckel-Gruber syndrome

Occipital encephalocele

Polydactyly

Craniofacial dysplasia

Renal cysts

Nephronophthisis

Small to normal-sized kidneys with cysts

Polydipsia and polyuria

Mild proteinuria with benign urinary sediment

ESKD possibly during childhood

Zellweger syndrome (cerebrohepatorenal syndrome)

Brain and liver defects

Developmental delay

High serum iron and copper levels

Hypotonia

Kidney cysts

Other congenital*

Cysts of nontubular origin (includes glomerular, subcapsular, and pyelocalyceal cysts)

Various clinical characteristics

Medullary sponge kidney

Tubular dilations and cysts of collecting ducts

Associated renal tubular acidosis type 1 and renal calculi

Does not typically progress to ESKD

Multicystic dysplastic kidney

Unilateral nonreniform mass of cysts and connective tissue, with typically absent functioning renal tissue

Oral-facial-digital syndrome (can follow multiple inheritance patterns including X-linked, autosomal dominant, or autosomal recessive)

Partial clefts in lip, tongue, and alveolar ridges

Hypoplasia of nasal cartilage

Microcysts in kidneys

Renal cystic dysplasia

Associated with urinary structural obstruction or metanephric malformation

Degree of dysplasia asymmetric between kidneys and kidney cysts

Trisomy 18

Profound developmental delay

Malformations of the head, face, hands, and feet

Kidney cysts in some cases

Acquired

Acquired cystic disease

Multiple cysts

Associated with long-term dialysis, usually after > 10 years

High risk of renal cell carcinoma

Cysts associated with tumors

For example, with renal cell carcinoma or nephroblastoma

Solitary simple cysts

Low risk of chronic kidney disease and hypertension

Associated with aging

* Caused by, eg, sporadic mutations, chromosomal abnormalities, teratogens, or unknown mechanisms.

ESKD = end-stage kidney disease.