Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a systemic syndrome capable of inducing remote organ dysfunction. Kidney–lung crosstalk is a form of interorgan communication in acute nephrology, with the heart acting as a pivotal intermediary. Emerging evidence supports the involvement of a gut–lung–kidney axis. Complement activation in these multiorgan crosstalk has emerged as a central amplifier of multiorgan damage. We reviewed the literature on kidney– lung interactions and complement activation in AKI through a bibliographic search of PubMed, Scopus, andWeb of Science. Most available data derive from experimental studies or intensive care unit (ICU) populations, often reported in reviews. We further report our real-world experience in a non-ICU nephrology setting, including 186 consecutive patients with AKI. Pulmonary involvement was present at hospital admission in 118 patients (63%). AKI stage 1 was observed in 20/118 patients (17%) with pulmonary involvement compared with 18/68 patients (27%) without pulmonary involvement (p < 0.001). In conclusion, AKI should be regarded as a systemic disease from its earliest stages. Kidney–lung interactions are clinically relevant even in mild AKI and outside critical care settings, underscoring the need for integrated organ assessment in routine nephrology practice. This review integrates complement activation as a central amplifier of kidney–lung crosstalk and multiorgan dysfunction, bridging experimental evidence with real-world observations from a non-critical care AKI population. By focusing on early AKI stages and the timing of pulmonary involvement, we highlight AKI as an active driver of systemic organ interactions rather than a late consequence of critical illness

Martino, G., Tinti, F., Perrone, M.a., Condò, S., Castagnola, V., Triggianese, P., et al. (2026). Kidney–Lung Crosstalk in Acute Nephrologic Involvement: Mechanisms, Complement Activation, and Implications for Multiorgan Dysfunction. LIFE, 16(2), 1-24 [10.3390/life16020276].

Kidney–Lung Crosstalk in Acute Nephrologic Involvement: Mechanisms, Complement Activation, and Implications for Multiorgan Dysfunction

Perrone, Marco Alfonso
Visualization
;
Triggianese, Paola
Conceptualization
;
Valentini, Alessandra;Della Morte, David
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Iellamo, Ferdinando
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Mitterhofer, Anna Paola
Writing – Review & Editing
;
2026-02-01

Abstract

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a systemic syndrome capable of inducing remote organ dysfunction. Kidney–lung crosstalk is a form of interorgan communication in acute nephrology, with the heart acting as a pivotal intermediary. Emerging evidence supports the involvement of a gut–lung–kidney axis. Complement activation in these multiorgan crosstalk has emerged as a central amplifier of multiorgan damage. We reviewed the literature on kidney– lung interactions and complement activation in AKI through a bibliographic search of PubMed, Scopus, andWeb of Science. Most available data derive from experimental studies or intensive care unit (ICU) populations, often reported in reviews. We further report our real-world experience in a non-ICU nephrology setting, including 186 consecutive patients with AKI. Pulmonary involvement was present at hospital admission in 118 patients (63%). AKI stage 1 was observed in 20/118 patients (17%) with pulmonary involvement compared with 18/68 patients (27%) without pulmonary involvement (p < 0.001). In conclusion, AKI should be regarded as a systemic disease from its earliest stages. Kidney–lung interactions are clinically relevant even in mild AKI and outside critical care settings, underscoring the need for integrated organ assessment in routine nephrology practice. This review integrates complement activation as a central amplifier of kidney–lung crosstalk and multiorgan dysfunction, bridging experimental evidence with real-world observations from a non-critical care AKI population. By focusing on early AKI stages and the timing of pulmonary involvement, we highlight AKI as an active driver of systemic organ interactions rather than a late consequence of critical illness
feb-2026
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/14
Settore MEDS-08/B - Nefrologia
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
kidney–lung crosstalk; acute kidney injury (AKI); acute lung injury (ALI); complement system; C5a–C5aR1 signaling; NETosis; multiorgan dysfunction; ischemia–reperfusion injury; complosome
Martino, G., Tinti, F., Perrone, M.a., Condò, S., Castagnola, V., Triggianese, P., et al. (2026). Kidney–Lung Crosstalk in Acute Nephrologic Involvement: Mechanisms, Complement Activation, and Implications for Multiorgan Dysfunction. LIFE, 16(2), 1-24 [10.3390/life16020276].
Martino, G; Tinti, F; Perrone, Ma; Condò, S; Castagnola, V; Triggianese, P; Olesinska, M; Valentini, A; Bernardini, S; Della Morte, D; Iellamo, F; Sa...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/461384
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