Symptoms
Illness & Symptoms: NSF & Gadolinium
Overview
Patients with NSF develop thickening of the skin and connective tissues that inhibits their ability to move and may result in broken bones. Other organs are at risk of thickening as well. The cause of NSF is not known and there is no consistently effective treatment of this condition.
Patients with NSF describe swelling and tightening of the skin, usually limited to the extremities (images), but sometimes involving the trunk. The condition may develop over a period of days to several weeks. In many cases, the skin thickening inhibits the flexion and extension of joints, resulting in contractures. Severely affected patients may be unable to walk, or fully extend the joints of their arms, hands, legs, and feet. Complaints of muscle weakness are common. Approximately 5% of patients have a rapidly progressive (fulminant) course.
The skin changes may start as reddened or darkened patches, papules, or plaques. In time, the skin may feel “woody” and the surface may resemble the texture of the peel of an orange. Patients may experience burning, itching, or severe sharp pains in areas of involvement. Radiography may reveal calcifications of the soft tissue. Deep “bone pain” has been described in the hips and in the ribs.
The skin lesions are commonly symmetrical, with zones between the ankles and thighs most commonly involved, followed by involvement between the wrist and upper arms. Hand and foot swelling with blister-like lesions has also been reported. Some patients have reported yellow papules or plaques on or near the eyes. Rapid, new onset fluctuating hypertension of unknown cause has been described prior to the onset of the skin lesions.
NSF
Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis (NSF), also known as nephrogenic fibrosing dermopathy (NFD), is a condition that, so far, has occurred only in people with kidney disease. There is no convincing evidence that NSF is caused by a medication, a microorganism, or by dialysis. There have been no cases identified prior to early 1997. At this point it appears NSF is a systemic disorder with its most prominent and visible effects in the skin. For this reason, Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis has been suggested as an equivalent terminology in those previously diagnosed with NFD, and is preferred in that it more accurately reflects our current understanding of the disorder.
Neither the duration of kidney disease nor its underlying cause are related to the development of NSF. Some patients with NSF develop skin tightening in the earliest stages of kidney disease, and others may have had kidney disease for years. Specific triggers for the development of NSF are still being investigated. Recent reports have strongly correlated the development of NSF with exposure to gadolinium-containing MRI contrast agents. Further information from the US Food and Drug Administration regarding this observation can be found here. The initial FDA advisory has been recently modified to the statement present at this site.
GE healthcare, one manufacturer of gadolinium-containing MRI contrast, has issued an informational announcement here. This announcement has been updated to include new information as of 12/2006 and is present at this site.
NSF appears to affect males and females in approximately equal numbers. NSF has been confirmed in children and the elderly, but tends to affect the middle-aged most commonly. It has been identified in patients from a variety of ethnic backgrounds and from North America, Europe, and Asia.
Besides kidney disease, conditions that may be associated with NSF include coagulation abnormalities and deep venous thrombosis, recent surgery (particularly vascular surgery), recent failure of a transplanted kidney, and sudden onset kidney disease with severe swelling of the extremities. It is very common for the NSF patient to have undergone a vascular surgical procedure (such as revision of an AV fistula, or angioplasty of a blood vessel) or to have experienced a thrombotic episode (thrombotic loss of a transplant or deep venous thrombosis) approximately two weeks before the onset of the skin changes.
Reports
Reports have identified the development of NSF following single and multiple administrations of the gadolinium-based contrast agents. The reports have not always identified a specific agent. Omniscan was the most commonly reported agent, when a specific agent was identified, followed by Magnevist and OptiMARK.
NSF also has developed after the sequential administration of Omniscan and MultiHance and Omniscan and ProHance. Because reports incompletely describe exposure to gadolinium-based contrast agents, it is not possible to know if the extent of risks for developing NSF is the same for all agents.
Patients should be screened for kidney problems prior to receiving one of these imaging agents. The recommended dose should not be exceeded and enough time should elapse to ensure that a dose has been eliminated from the body before the agent is used again.
There have been no reports of NSF among patients with normal kidney function or those with mild-to-moderate kidney insufficiency.