| Literature DB >> 29410944 |
Homa Timlin1, Laurence Magder2, Michelle Petri3.
Abstract
Background and objective The rate of end-stage renal disease from lupus nephritis has not declined, in spite of recent advances in therapeutics, such as mycophenolate mofetil (MMF). To provide insight into rates of the clinical outcomes in current practice after biopsy-proven lupus nephritis, we used a prospective cohort of the patients with newly diagnosed lupus nephritis, treated with MMF and observed their outcomes. Method Twenty systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients who began mycophenolate mofetil shortly after a biopsy-confirmed diagnosis of lupus nephritis were included in the analysis. There were five patients with class III, nine with class IV, four with class III-V, one with class IV-V and two with class V lupus nephritis. The initial dose of mycophenolate mofetil was 1000 mg twice daily. If no improvement was observed, the dose was increased to 1500 mg twice daily after one month. We estimated the survival function for the time until the urine protein/creatinine reached 0.50 grams or less, after starting MMF by using an approach that accommodated interval-censored data. We also evaluated the treatment response using five different sets of criteria for the response that have previously been used in the clinical trials. These included the Bristol Myers-Squibb (BMS), the American College of Rheumatology (ACR), the lupus nephritis assessment with rituximab (LUNAR ), the Aspreva Lupus Management Study (ALMS), and the Abatacept and Cyclophosphamide Combination Efficacy and Safety Study (ACCESS). Result We estimated that 52% of the SLE patients reached 0.50 grams of proteinuria within 51 days of starting mycophenolate mofetil (95% confidence interval 29%-74%) and 77% reached 0.50 grams or less within 260 days (95% confidence interval 57%-97%). The probability of response at 90 and 180 days was 5% and 33% (the Bristol Myers-Squibb), 26% and 57% (the American College of Rheumatology), and 11% and 28% (the lupus nephritis assessment with rituximab, the Aspreva Lupus Management Study and the Abatacept and Cyclophosphamide Combination Efficacy and Safety Study). Conclusion The complete renal response ranged from 28% to 57% at six months in the routine clinical practice, mirroring the results in randomized clinical trials. Regardless of the response measures, the complete renal response was slow and, by most indices, reached in only a minority of the patients by the end of six months of the induction therapy. This indicates the urgent need for the faster and more effective lupus nephritis treatments.Entities:
Keywords: acr (american college of rheumatology); alms (aspreva lupus management study); bms (bristol myers-squibb); esrd (end stage renal disease); lunar (lupus nephritis assessment with rituximab); lupus nephritis; mycophenolate mofetil; proteinuria; systemic lupus erythematosus; urine protein creatinine ratio
Year: 2017 PMID: 29410944 PMCID: PMC5796813 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.1907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Definition of the complete response in lupus nephritis trials.
BMS: the Bristol-Myers Squibb, ACR: the American College of Rheumatology, LUNAR: the lupus nephritis assessment with rituximab, ALMS: the Aspreva Lupus Management Study and ACCESS: the Abatacept and Cyclophosphamide Combination Efficacy and Safety Study (reprinted from the abatacept for the lupus nephritis 2012 [10], with permission from Dr. Wofsy, the author).
| Criteria | Urine protein creatinine ratio | Creatinine or estimated glomerular filtration rate | Urinalysis, cells or casts | Steroid taper required | Criteria must be met on two successive visits |
| BMS | ≤ 0.26 | Within 10% of the screening or baseline value | Normal | No | Yes |
| ACR | ≤ 0.20 | Within 25% of the screening or baseline value | Normal | Not addressed | No |
| LUNAR | ≤ 0.50 | Within 15% of the screening or baseline value | Normal | Yes | No |
| ALMS | ≤ 0.50 | Normal | Normal | Yes | No |
| ACCESS | ≤ 0.50 | Normal or within 25% of the baseline value | Not a component | Yes | No |
The estimated probability of achieving a urine protein/creatinine ratio below 0.5 within 180 days of the treatment initiation, overall and in subgroups.
| Subgroup | Estimated probability (95% CI) |
| All patients (n=20) | 63% (41%, 84%) |
| Race | |
| Caucasian American (n=7) | 100% |
| African American (n=9) | 40% (6%, 73%) |
| Class of lupus nephritis | |
| Class III (n=8) | 72% (43%, 99%) |
| Class IV (n=10) | 60% (31%, 89%) |
| Class V (n=6) | 50% (10%, 90%) |
The estimated proportion with remission by 90 and 180 days based on different definitions.
| Response definition | Probability of the response within 90 days (95% CI) | Probability of the response within 180 days (95% CI) |
| BMS | 5% (1%, 15%) | 33% (9%, 37%) |
| ACR | 26% (4%, 48%) | 57% (35%, 79%) |
| LUNAR/ALMS/ACCESS | 11% (1%, 25%) | 28% (7%, 49%) |
Figure 1The timing (days) of the urinary protein to creatinine ratio reaches at or below 0.5 grams in the lupus nephritis.