Monday, November 24, 2025

Webinar Summary for Doctors: Beyond the Illusion: Unravelling the Puzzle of aHUS

A recent multidisciplinary webinar jointly organized by NephroPlus, the Atypical HUS India Foundation and the Kidney Warriors Foundation, with support from AstraZeneca, brought together leading experts in complement-mediated diseases to examine current challenges, evolving strategies, and systemic gaps in the management of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS). Participants included clinicians with extensive experience in adult and pediatric thrombotic microangiopathies (TMAs) such as Dr. Vivekanand Jha, Dr. Arvind Bagga, Dr. Nicole Isbel, Dr. Aditi Sinha, Dr. Manisha Sahay, Dr. Raja Ramchandran, Dr. Sreebhushan Raju, Dr. Sayali Thakare, Dr. Sandhya Suresh and Dr. Arun. The session aimed to distill global experience, regional realities, and clinical insights into a cohesive framework for improving diagnosis and care of complement-mediated TMA in India.

Diagnostic Complexity in Complement-Mediated TMA

One of the recurrent themes was the inherent diagnostic complexity of aHUS and its frequent misclassification in early stages. The syndrome often presents with the familiar triad of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and acute kidney injury—features that overlap significantly with sepsis, malignant hypertension, shiga-toxin–associated HUS, pregnancy-related disorders, and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP). This overlap leads to delayed recognition in peripheral centers, where supportive care is often initiated without a dedicated evaluation for complement-mediated disease.

Experts emphasized that certain patterns should heighten suspicion for complement-mediated TMA: disproportionately severe AKI relative to systemic illness, persistent thrombocytopenia despite clinical improvement elsewhere, markedly elevated LDH, and schistocytosis. Early ADAMTS13 testing was highlighted as a critical step in distinguishing complement-mediated processes from TTP, and several speakers underscored the importance of not allowing the absence of immediate ADAMTS13 results to delay the initiation of diagnostic pathways or consideration of complement blockade.

Importance of Early Complement Blockade

Timely initiation of C5 inhibition remains the single most important modifiable determinant of renal recovery in aHUS. International registries and national cohorts demonstrate that earlier initiation leads to a higher likelihood of renal salvage, fewer long-term dialysis requirements, and lower relapse risk. Plasma exchange, once a mainstay of therapy, is now recognized as potentially counterproductive once complement blockade is initiated, given its impact on drug clearance.

Neurological involvement, while variably reported in literature, was discussed as a marker of severe endothelial injury. In such situations, early and aggressive complement inhibition may help halt progression. Similarly, postpartum TMAs that fail to improve after several days of supportive care may represent complement-driven endothelial injury rather than classical preeclampsia or HELLP syndrome, warranting reconsideration of therapeutic priorities.

Complement Testing and Genetic Evaluation

The webinar highlighted the dual importance and limitation of genetic testing in aHUS. While genetic variants in complement regulators and effectors—such as CFH, CFI, MCP, C3, and CFHR rearrangements—provide valuable prognostic information, their absence does not exclude complement dysregulation. This is especially true in settings where environmental or physiologic triggers such as pregnancy or infections may unmask latent pathway vulnerabilities.

Experts noted the challenges faced in India: variability in assay quality, limited availability of specialized laboratories, long turnaround times for genetic panels, and frequent preanalytical errors in complement sampling. Proper sample handling—rapid processing, cold-chain integrity, and avoidance of complement activation ex vivo—was emphasised repeatedly. Several speakers highlighted that complement levels may appear normal even in active disease due to dynamic consumption, reinforcing the primacy of clinical judgement.

Management of Anti–Factor H Antibody–Associated aHUS

A detailed pediatric case underscored the complexity of managing anti–factor H antibody–mediated aHUS, a phenotype more prevalent in South Asian populations. These patients often present with severe renal injury, very high antibody titers, and substantial complement activation. Effective management requires an integrated approach: plasmapheresis to remove circulating antibodies, immunosuppression (often multi-agent) to suppress antibody production, and complement inhibition to arrest endothelial injury.

Relapses, often triggered by infections, highlight the need for vigilant long-term monitoring. Decisions regarding B-cell–targeted therapies such as rituximab, or newer agents, depend on persistence or rebound of antibody titers. Persistent proteinuria despite hematologic remission remains an important marker of chronic complement-mediated damage, warranting longitudinal nephrology follow-up.

Pregnancy-Associated TMA: Recognizing the Complement Continuum

Pregnancy-associated TMA surfaced as an especially challenging scenario. The clinical overlap with preeclampsia, eclampsia, and HELLP syndrome complicates early diagnosis. However, recurrent episodes across pregnancies, early-onset severe hypertension, precipitous renal injury, or poor fetal outcomes may point towards underlying complement dysregulation. Several experts noted that pregnancy can serve as a physiologic stressor that unmask latent complement pathway abnormalities.

The group discussed the role of prophylactic measures such as aspirin and hydroxychloroquine, which may reduce endothelial activation but do not directly modulate complement activity. In cases where complement-mediated TMA is strongly suspected, early complement inhibition may interrupt the cascade of endothelial injury and improve both maternal and renal outcomes.

Long-Term Management, Relapse Monitoring, and Withdrawal Strategies

The webinar also explored long-term management strategies, including when and how to consider withdrawal of complement blockade. Decisions must incorporate genetic background, disease severity, organ involvement, presence of anti–factor H antibodies, and patient-specific risk factors. Close monitoring after withdrawal—through regular labs, blood pressure tracking, and symptom surveillance—is critical, particularly in patients with complement gene variants or history of relapse.

Relapse risk is highest in the first year after withdrawal and in individuals with pathogenic complement variants. Several experts advocated for structured relapse action plans that empower patients and clinicians to recognize early warning signs and reinitiate therapy promptly.

Building a Better aHUS Care Ecosystem in India

The session concluded with a forward-looking examination of systemic barriers in India. Key needs include: expanding access to complement assays and genetic testing; improving diagnostic capacity in regional hospitals; establishing national registries to track epidemiology, mutations, and outcomes; and developing designated Centers of Excellence with multidisciplinary TMA teams. Strengthening referral pathways and ensuring equitable access to complement inhibition remain high priorities for improving outcomes nationwide.

Key Takeaways

• Complement-mediated TMA is frequently misdiagnosed; early clinical suspicion is essential.

• Early C5 inhibition significantly improves renal recovery and reduces long-term morbidity.

• Genetic testing informs prognosis but must not delay therapy.

• Anti–factor H antibody–mediated aHUS requires integrated immunosuppression, plasmapheresis, and complement blockade.

• Pregnancy-associated TMA often reflects unmasked complement dysregulation.

• India needs improved diagnostic infrastructure, national referral pathways, and Centers of Excellence.

• Long-term follow-up and structured relapse plans are essential due to ongoing risk.


Webinar Summary for Patients: Beyond the Illusion: Unravelling the Puzzle of aHUS

A recent webinar hosted by NephroPlus, the Atypical HUS India Foundation and the Kidney Warriors Foundation, with support from AstraZeneca, brought together leading kidney specialists to discuss atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS). This rare and serious condition affects the blood and kidneys and can be difficult to diagnose. Experts including Dr. Vivekanand Jha, Dr. Arvind Bagga, Dr. Nicole Isbel, Dr. Aditi Sinha, Dr. Manisha Sahay, Dr. Raja Ramchandran, Dr. Sreebhushan Raju, Dr. Sayali Thakare, Dr. Sandhya Suresh and Dr. Arun shared their experiences and offered clear guidance on how care can be improved in India.

Why aHUS Is So Hard to Diagnose

One of the biggest challenges with aHUS is that its early symptoms look similar to many other illnesses. Patients often arrive with anemia, low platelet counts, and kidney problems — symptoms also seen in infections, blood pressure emergencies, and pregnancy-related complications. Because these conditions are far more common, aHUS is often not recognized right away.

Certain signs should raise suspicion: kidney injury that seems too severe for the illness, low platelet counts that do not improve, very high LDH (a marker of cell damage), and damaged red blood cells on the blood smear. Early testing to rule out other conditions, especially TTP, is essential. Once these are ruled out, doctors can consider aHUS sooner instead of waiting for symptoms to worsen.

Early Treatment Makes a Major Difference

Early treatment with complement-blocking medicines, most commonly eculizumab, can dramatically improve outcomes. These medicines stop the part of the immune system that causes blood vessel damage in aHUS. Patients treated earlier are much more likely to recover kidney function and avoid long-term dialysis.

Once treatment begins, older approaches such as plasma exchange should usually be stopped because they can reduce the effectiveness of these medicines. Severe symptoms such as confusion or seizures suggest rapidly progressing disease and may require quicker treatment decisions. Similarly, if a woman develops blood vessel damage after childbirth and does not improve within a few days, complement-blocking therapy may be needed.

The Role and Limits of Genetic Testing

Genetic testing can help explain why a person developed aHUS and whether they are at higher risk of relapse. However, a negative genetic test does not rule it out. Many patients have normal results but still have strong signs of complement system overactivity.

Access to high-quality testing remains limited in India, and sample handling errors can give misleading results. Doctors emphasized that treatment should be guided mainly by clinical judgement rather than waiting for test results.

Anti–Factor H Antibody–Related aHUS

Some patients, especially children in South Asia, develop aHUS because their immune system produces harmful antibodies against a protein called factor H. This causes sudden and severe kidney problems. These patients usually need plasma exchange to remove the antibodies, immunosuppressive medicines to control them, and complement-blocking therapy to stop further damage.

Viral infections can trigger relapses even after improvement, so long-term monitoring is important. Ongoing protein loss in urine may indicate that the kidneys still have ongoing injury.

Why Pregnancy Can Trigger aHUS

Pregnancy-related aHUS is especially challenging because it closely resembles complications like preeclampsia or HELLP syndrome. Repeated severe issues across pregnancies, sudden kidney failure, or very low platelet counts may indicate underlying complement problems. In such cases, complement-blocking treatment may help prevent permanent kidney injury.

Long-Term Care and Relapse Prevention

Long-term follow-up after an aHUS episode is essential. Some patients may eventually stop complement-blocking therapy, while others may need longer treatment depending on their condition. Relapses can occur, especially within the first year after stopping treatment. Patients and families should be aware of warning signs and know when to seek immediate help.

Strengthening aHUS Care in India

Experts highlighted several areas where care can be improved: expanded awareness among regional hospitals, easier access to complement and genetic testing, national registries to study patterns of disease, and establishing Centers of Excellence to guide diagnosis and treatment. Better referral pathways and faster access to complement-blocking medicines could make a major difference in outcomes for patients across the country.

 

Webinar Recording: Beyond the Illusion: Unravelling the Puzzle of aHUS

A webinar for doctors was held on the 18th November where leading researchers and clinicians from India and Australia spoke on various aspects of the disease. Here is a recording of the webinar:


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