| Literature DB >> 23872289 |
Ngianga-Bakwin Kandala1, Martin Connock, Amy Grove, Paul Sutcliffe, Syed Mohiuddin, Louise Hartley, Rachel Court, Ewen Cummins, Caroline Gordon, Aileen Clarke.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To undertake a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate clinical effectiveness of belimumab for patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and antinuclear and/or anti-double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) autoantibodies.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical Pharmacology; Epidemiology; Preventive Medicine; Public Health
Year: 2013 PMID: 23872289 PMCID: PMC3717447 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-002852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Summary of the major clinical measures used in systemic lupus erythematosus trials.
Figure 2PRISMA 2009 flow diagram for belimumab in systemic lupus erythematosus randomised controlled trials and on-going trials.
Quality assessment of the included trials
| Quality items | L02 | BLISS-52 | BLISS-76 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Does reporting suggest that randomisation was carried out appropriately? | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Does reporting suggest that the concealment of treatment allocation adequate? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear |
| Were the groups reported as similar at the outset of the study in terms of prognostic factors? | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Were the care providers, participants and outcome assessors reported as blind to treatment allocation? | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Were any unexpected imbalances in drop-outs reported between groups? | No | No | No |
| Is there any evidence to suggest that the authors measured more outcomes than they reported? | No | No | No |
| Did the analysis include an intention-to-treat analysis? If so, was this appropriate and were appropriate methods used to account for missing data? | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Quality assessment used information presented in the study journal articles and the manufacturer's submission to the US FDA and was based on CRD guidance (2008)19 for undertaking systematic reviews in healthcare.
(CRD, Centre for Reviews and Dissemination; York: Centre for Reviews and Dissemination).
Major characteristics of included studies
| Study | Treatment (intravenous) | N | Mean age (SD) years | SELENA-SLEDAI at entry | Geographical distribution of patients | Ethnic make-up of trial participants | Number and location of Study Centres | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L02 2006 Phase II 52 week | Bel 1 mg/kg | 114 | 42 (11) | >4 points | USA (98%), | Caucasian | NR | 69.9% | 59 in N America |
| Bel 4 mg/kg | 111 | Canada (2%) | African American | NR | 24.7% | ||||
| Bel 10 mg/kg | 111 | Latino | NR | 18.5% | |||||
| Placebo | 113 | ||||||||
| BLISS-52 2009 Phase III 52 week | Bel 1 mg/kg | 288 | 36 (11) | >6 points | Latin America (50%), | Caucasian | 229 | 27% | 90 in Pacific Asia. |
| Bel 10 mg/kg | 290 | Asia (38%), | Asian | 327 | 38% | 11 in S America and E Europe | |||
| Placebo | 287 | E Europe and Australia (13%) | Black/African Am | 30 | 4% | ||||
| Alaskan Nat/Am Indian | 279 | 32% | |||||||
| Nat Hawaiian/Pacific Islander | 0 | 0% | |||||||
| Multiracial | 5 | 1% | |||||||
| BLISS-76 2009 Phase III 76 week | Bel 1 mg/kg | 271 | 40 (12) | >6 points | USA and Canada (53%), | Caucasian | 569 | 70% | 136 in |
| Bel 10 mg/kg | 273 | W Europe (25%) | Asian | 28 | 3% | N America and Europe | |||
| Placebo | 275 | E Europe (11%) | Black/African Am | 118 | 14% | ||||
| Latin America (11%) | Alaskan Nat/Am Indian | 103 | 13% | ||||||
| Nat Hawaiian/Pacific Islander | 1 | 0% | |||||||
| Multiracial | 8 | 1% | |||||||
NR, not reported; SELENA-SLEDAI, Safety of Estrogen in Lupus National Assessment-Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index.
Figure 3Differing centre locations in the BLISS 52 and BLISS 76 multicentre trials.
Outcomes defined and prespecified in the BLISS 52 and BLISS 76 trials and their accompanying designated status
| Outcome | Measure | Outcome specification |
|---|---|---|
| SLE Responder Index (SRI*) | Percentage responders at week 52 | Primary outcome |
| Reduction in SLEDAI score by ≥4 points | Percentage responders at week 52 | Major secondary outcome |
| Steroid reduction weeks 40–52 | Percentage responders | Major secondary outcome |
| SLE Responder Index | Percentage responders at week 76 | Major secondary outcome |
| SLEDAI SLE flare index over 52 weeks | Time to first flare | Secondary outcome |
| SLE Responder Index (SRI) | Percentage responders at timed clinic visits | Other outcome reported |
| Modified SLE responder index | Percentage responders at week 52 | Other outcome reported |
| No worsening in PGA score by ≥0.3 | Percentage responders at week 52 | Other outcome reported |
| No new BILAG 1A/2B domain scores | Percentage responders at week 52 | Other outcome reported |
| Death | Number during exposure | Safety outcome |
| Treatment emergent adverse events | Number during exposure | Safety outcome |
| Serious infections | Number during exposure | Safety outcome |
*Composite outcome measure consisting of ≥4 points improvement in SLEDAI score, no worsening in PGA by ≥0.3 points and no new BILAG 1A or 2B domain scores. Continuous outcomes are in italics.
ACR, American College of Rheumatology; BILAG, British Isles Lupus Assessment Group; EQ-5D, EuroQoL 5 dimensions; FACIT, Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy; SF-36, Short Form 36-Item Health Survey; SLEDAI, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index; SLICC, Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics.
Figure 4Summary of results for major binary and time to event outcomes in belimumab randomised controlled trials.
Figure 5Summary of results for major continuous outcomes in BLISS 52 and BLISS 76 trials.
Figure 6Meta-analysis of major outcomes in the two BLISS trials.