| Literature DB >> 29344386 |
Zahi Touma1, Dafna D Gladman1.
Abstract
SLE is a serious, debilitating autoimmune disease that affects various organs and body systems. Of all the heterogeneous autoimmune diseases, SLE is perhaps the most heterogeneous. Patients with SLE, who are primarily female, have diverse disease manifestations and severity. SLE is characterised by substantial concentrations of autoantibodies against nuclear antigens, which are thought to be caused by immune cell dysregulation. Until recently, several immunosuppressant agents were used to treat this disease. Efforts to develop drugs against targets potentially involved in disease mechanisms have resulted in the identification and use of BAFF (B-cell activating factor)/APRIL (a proliferation-inducing ligand) inhibitors to treat SLE. Drugs in late-stage development that focus on pathways that are dysregulated in SLE include those that target the interferon pathway, T-cell signalling and B-cell signalling. New therapeutic agents are still necessary because of the unmet medical needs associated with this disease, including insufficient disease control, poor health-related quality of life, comorbidities, toxicity of the majority of therapies and diminished survival. Despite the substantial long-term investment of research, clinical activity and resources for identifying new treatments for this disease, only one new therapy, the biological belimumab, has been approved in the past 50 years. Efforts to develop drugs to address these needs are challenged by problems associated with disease heterogeneity, variable disease mechanisms and trial design. This review provides an overview of current and future treatments, discusses challenges in the SLE drug development process and offers recommendations for overcoming these challenges.Entities:
Keywords: cytokines; interferon; lupus nephritis; systemic lupus erythematosus; treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 29344386 PMCID: PMC5761306 DOI: 10.1136/lupus-2017-000239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lupus Sci Med ISSN: 2053-8790
Figure 1The most common pitfalls in lupus clinical trials The inner circle lists the most common pitfalls that have hindered the success of lupus clinical trials. The outside statements reflect the domains in which the pitfalls may occur and insights into each of the pitfalls, along with some guidance. GCS, glucocorticosteroid.
Pipeline of drugs being evaluated in phase III clinical trials for SLE19
| Drug | Mechanism of action | Overview of current phase III | Overview of phase II/III development in SLE |
| Abatacept | T-cell costimulation modulator (cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4–IgG1 fusion) | Efficacy and safety of abatacept in lupus nephritis on a background of MMF and GCS. Trial is ongoing. | In a 52-week phase II/III trial involving patients with lupus nephritis, there was no difference between treatment groups and placebo in time to confirmed complete response (primary endpoint), although biological activity was observed. Treatment was well tolerated. |
| Anifrolumab | Fully human, IgG1 κ monoclonal antibody that binds to and neutralises receptors of all type I IFNs | Two currently ongoing trials are evaluating the efficacy and safety of anifrolumab either at one or two different dosing regimens for patients with moderate-to-severe SLE. A third trial evaluating the long-term safety and tolerability of anifrolumab for patients with moderate-to-severe SLE is recruiting patients who completed one of the above phase III trials. | In a phase IIb trial for patients with moderate-to-severe SLE who did not have active and severe lupus nephritis or neuropsychiatric SLE, a significantly greater percentage of patients receiving anifrolumab 300 mg every 4 weeks achieved an SRI(4) response at week 24 with sustained reduction of GCS compared with placebo (primary endpoint). |
| Atacicept | TACI-Fc fusion protein that binds BAFF and APRIL | Trial has been completed and results are published. | In a phase II/III trial, atacicept did not improve flare rate (primary endpoint) or time to first flare (main secondary endpoint) during a 52-week trial compared with placebo. |
| Lupuzor | 21-mer peptide derived from small nuclear riboprotein U1-70K, which is phosphorylated at Ser140 | Efficacy and safety of Lupuzor plus standard of care for patients with SLE | In a phase IIb trial, a significantly greater percentage of patients achieved SRI(4) response at week 12 with Lupuzor given once every 4 weeks compared with placebo (primary endpoint). Treatment was well tolerated in general. |
| Rituximab | Anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (B cell) | Evaluation of rituximab plus MMF for flare reduction and steroid-sparing benefit for patients with lupus nephritis (RITUXILUP). Trial is ongoing. | Although previous phase II/III trials did not meet their primary endpoint, |
| Voclosporin | Immunosuppressant, calcineurin inhibitor | Efficacy and safety of voclosporin in patients with active lupus nephritis. Trial is currently recruiting patients. | In a completed phase IIb trial, at 48 weeks of treatment, 49% of patients with lupus nephritis achieved complete remission with the lower dosage voclosporin regimen (23.7 mg two times per week) compared with 24% in the control arm (P<0.001). |
APRIL, a proliferation-inducing ligand; BAFF, B-cell activating factor; GCS, glucocorticosteroid; IFN, interferon; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; SRI(4), SLE Responder Index (SRI) with ≥4 point reductions; SRI(5), SRI with ≥5 point reductions; SRI(6), SRI with ≥6 point reductions TACI, transmembrane activator and CAML (calcium-modulating cyclophilin ligand) interactor.
Pipeline of drugs being evaluated in phase II clinical trials for SLE19
| Drug | Mechanism of action | Overview of phase II development in SLE* |
| Aldesleukin (ILT-101) | IL-2 | Evaluate the efficacy, safety and pharmacokinetics of ILT-101 in moderate-to-severe SLE. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Baricitinib (LY3009104) | JAK inhibitor | Evaluate the safety and efficacy of baricitinib for patients with SLE. Trial is ongoing. |
| BIIB059 | Anti-BDCA2 monoclonal antibody | Efficacy of BIIB059 in reducing skin disease activity for patients with SLE and cutaneous lupus erythematosus with or without systemic manifestations. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| BI655064 | Anti-CD40 monoclonal antibody | Dosage finding, efficacy and safety of BI655064 for patients with active lupus nephritis. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Bortezomib | Proteasome inhibitor | Change in disease-specific antibody titres with bortezomib. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| BT063 | Anti–IL-10 monoclonal antibody | Efficacy and safety of BT063 for patients with SLE. Trial is ongoing. |
| Cenerimod (ACT-334441) | Sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor agonist | Biological activity, safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of |
| Dapirolizumab pegol | Anti-CD40L | Efficacy and safety of dapirolizumab for patients with moderate-to-severe SLE. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Edratide | Peptide based on complementary-determining region I of a human anti-DNA monoclonal antibody | In a 26-week phase II trial, no significant difference was observed between edratide-treated and placebo-treated patients in reduction in SLEDAI-2K and adjusted mean SLEDAI, although positive trends were noted for other endpoints. |
| Filgotinib | JAK1 inhibitor | Efficacy of filgotinib for female patients with moderate-to-severe active cutaneous lupus erythematosus. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| GS-9876 | SYK inhibitor | Efficacy of GS-9876 for female patients with moderate-to-severe active cutaneous lupus erythematosus. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Iberdomide (CC-220) | Ubiquitin ligase modulator | Efficacy, safety, tolerability, pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of CC-220 for patients with SLE. A pilot study is ongoing, with a phase II trial currently recruiting patients. |
| IFN-α-kinoid | Anti-IFN-αvaccine | Efficacy, neutralisation of the IFN gene signature and safety of IFN-α-kinoid for patients with SLE. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Iguratimod | Antiinflammatory, NF-κB inhibitor | Efficacy and safety of iguratimod for patients with active diffuse lupus nephritis and refractory lupus nephritis. Studies have not yet started recruiting. |
| Nelfinavir | HIV-1 protease inhibitor | Effect of nelfinavir in reducing anti-dsDNA antibodies. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Obinutuzumab | Anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody | Efficacy and safety of obinutuzumab plus MMF/MPA compared with MMF/MPA-treated placebo for patients with proliferative lupus nephritis. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| OMS721 | Anti-MASP-2 monoclonal antibody | Safety and tolerability of OMS721 for patients with lupus nephritis. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Rapamycin (sirolimus) | Immunosuppressant | Two studies have taken place. One was a prospective study evaluating decrease in disease activity and GCS reduction for patients with SLE. The second study evaluated efficacy and safety for patients with idiopathic and lupus-related membranous nephropathy. Trials are completed, and no results are available. |
| RC18 | TACI-antibody fusion protein | Efficacy and safety of RC18 for patients with moderate-to-severe SLE. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| RSLV-132 | RNase-Fc fusion protein | Effect of RSLV-132 on cutaneous manifestations for patients with SLE. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| SM101 | Soluble Fc-gamma receptor IIb | In a phase IIa trial, the SRI response rate for patients treated with SM101 12 mg/kg once weekly for 4 weeks was approximately twofold higher than placebo at 24 weeks (39% vs 18%). |
| Theralizumab (TAB08) | CD28 superagonist (Treg) | Efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of TAB08 for patients with SLE not adequately controlled with current concomitant therapy. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
| Ustekinumab | Anti–IL-12/–23 monoclonal antibody | In a phase II study for patients with active SLE, 60% of patients receiving ustekinumab had an SRI(4) response at week 24 compared with 31% for placebo (P=0.0046). |
| Vobarilizumab (ALX-0061) | Anti–IL-6 receptor nanoantibody | Efficacy and safety of vobarilizumab for patients with moderate-to-severe SLE. Trial is ongoing. |
| XmAb5871 | Anti-CD19 monoclonal antibody (B cell) | Efficacy and safety of XmAb5871 for patients with SLE. Trial is currently recruiting patients. |
*Phase I/II trials not reported.
BDCA2, blood dendritic cell antigen-2; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA; GCS; glucocorticosteroid; IFN-α, interferon-α; IL-2, interleukin-2; IL-6, interleukin-6; IL-12, interleukin-12; IL-23, interleukin-23; JAK, Janus kinase; MASP-2, mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-2; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; MPA, mycophenolic acid; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; RNase, ribonuclease; SLEDAI, SLE Disease Activity Index; SLEDAI-2K, modified SLEDAI scale introduced in 2002; SRI(4), SLE Responder Index (SRI) with ≥4 point reductions; SYK, spleen tyrosine kinase; TACI, transmembrane activator and CAML (calcium-modulating cyclophilin ligand) interactor; Treg, T-regulatory cell.