| Literature DB >> 30186414 |
Jian-Nan Zheng1, Tong-Dan Bi1, Lin-Bo Zhu1, Lin-Lin Liu1.
Abstract
The efficacy and safety of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) for immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN) remains debatable. Therefore, the present meta-analysis was conducted with randomized controlled trials (RCTs). PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were analyzed to identify eligible trials. The pooled risk ratio (RR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) was estimated for all the dichotomous outcome measures. A total of eight RCTs with nine publications (n=510 patients) were included. No significant difference was noted between therapeutic regimens with and without MMF for renal remission and end stage renal disease (ESRD) of patients with IgAN (seven trials; RR, 1.250; 95% CI, 0.993-1.574; P=0.057; and four trials; RR, 0.728; 95% CI, 0.164-3.236; P=0.676). To further define the effects of MMF for renal remission, subgroup analysis was performed, demonstrating that MMF was significantly more effective compared with the placebo (three trials; RR, 2.152; 95% CI, 1.198-3.867; P=0.010), although the immunosuppressive regimens with MMF had no significantly different effects compared with those without MMF (four trials; RR, 1.140; 95% CI, 0.955-1.361; P=0.146), indicating that MMF was superior to placebo and had a similar efficacy to other immunosuppressants for renal remission. In addition, subgroup analysis for ESRD revealed no significant differences between MMF and placebo and between the immunosuppressive regimens with and without MMF (three trials; RR, 0.957; 95% CI, 0.160-5.726; P=0.962; and one trial; RR, 0.205; 95% CI, 0.010-4.200; P=0.303). Furthermore, there were no significant differences between the therapeutic regimens with and without MMF in terms of the risk of adverse events. The present meta-analysis demonstrated that MMF was more effective compared with the placebo, may have similar efficacy to other immunosuppressants in terms of inducing renal remission of IgAN and may not increase the risk of adverse events. The long-term effects of MMF on the prognosis of patients with IgAN require verification in further studies.Entities:
Keywords: end-stage renal disease; immunoglobulin A nephropathy; meta-analysis; mycophenolate mofetil; randomized controlled trial; renal remission
Year: 2018 PMID: 30186414 PMCID: PMC6122311 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2018.6418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1.Flow chart of study selection process.
Characteristics of the included trials.
| Author, year | Country | Population setting | No. of patients | Male, % | Mean age, years | eGFR, ml/min/1.73 m2 | SCr, µmol/l | UPE, g/day | Regimens in MMF groups (treatment time) | Regimens in control groups (treatment time) | months | Follow-up, (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hou | China | IgAN with active | 174 | 44.3 | 31.5 | MMF: 90.2 | MMF: 85.4 | MMF: | MMF 1.5 g/day + | Prednisone | 12 | ( |
| proliferative lesions; | (64.4–109.6); | (68.1–109.6); | 2.37±1.23; | prednisolone (6m) | (6m) | |||||||
| UPE ≥1.0 g/day; eGFR | Control: 94.3 | Control: 80.4 | Control: | |||||||||
| ≥30 ml/min/1.73 m2 | (72.2–111.4) | (64.1–105.7) | 2.47±2.01 | |||||||||
| Hogg | USA | IgAN with UPCR ≥0.6 g/day | 44 | 62.0 | 32.0 | MMF: | NS | MMF: | MMF 25–36 | Placebo | 12 | ( |
| (males) or ≥0.8 g/day (females); | 95.3±36.5; | 1.59±0.90; | mg/kg/day (12m) | |||||||||
| and eGFR ≥50 ml/min/1.73 m2 | Control: | Control: | ||||||||||
| or ≥40 ml/min/1.73 m2 in those already receiving RASI | 105.6±49.0 | 1.40±0.56 | ||||||||||
| Liu | China | IgAN ≥Lee III, UPE ≥1.0 g/day, | 84 | 60.7 | 38.6 | MMF: | MMF: | MMF: | MMF 1.5 g/day + | CTX + | 18 | ( |
| and SCr <267 µmol/l | 56.5±17.4; | 134.7±35.2; | 2.83±0.65; | prednisone | prednisone | |||||||
| Control: | Control: | Control: | (12m); | (12m) | ||||||||
| 52.9±18.8 | 127.3±31.4 | 2.77±0.81 | ||||||||||
| Liu | China | IgAN with nephrotic | 40 | 52.5 | 32.0 | NS | MMF: | MMF: | MMF 1.5 g/day + | LEF + | 6 | ( |
| syndrome | 92.8±26.1; | 4.9±2.4; | prednisone (6m) | prednisone | ||||||||
| Control: | Control: | (6m) | ||||||||||
| 96.4±24.6 | 4.8±2.6 | |||||||||||
| Tang | China | IgAN with UPE >1 g/day, | 40 | 35.0 | 42.7 | MMF: | MMF: | MMF: | MMF 1.5–2.0 | Placebo (6m) | 72 | ( |
| Tang | SCr ≤300 µmol/l, and Haas | 75±7.3; | 135.25±15.03; | 1.8±0.21; | g/day (6m) | |||||||
| subclass II–IV | Control: | Control: | Control: | |||||||||
| 69±7.1 | 145.86±20.33 | 1.87±0.28 | ||||||||||
| Frisch | USA | IgAN with UPE >1 g/day | 32 | 84.4 | 38.1 | MMF: | MMF: | MMF: | MMF 2.0 g/day | Placebo (12m) | 24 | ( |
| plus ≥2 of the following risk | 38±22.2; | 229.84±106.08; | 2.7±1.6; | (12m) | ||||||||
| factors: male sex, hypertension, | Control: | Control: | Control: | |||||||||
| CrCl <80 ml/min and severe lesions on biopsy | 41±26.3 | 194.48±63.65 | 2.7±1.4 | |||||||||
| Maes | Belgium | IgAN with CCr 20–70 ml/min/ | 34 | 70.6 | 40.5 | MMF: | MMF: | MMF: | MMF 2 g/day | Placebo (36m) | 36 | ( |
| 1.73 m2 and/or >1 g/day/1.73 m2 | 60±7; | 129.06±7.07; | 1.9±0.3; | (36m) | ||||||||
| and/or hypertension and/or | Control: | Control: | Control: | |||||||||
| histologic unfavorable criteria | 69±7 | 122.88±8.84 | 1.3±0.4 | |||||||||
| Chen | China | IgAN with Lee IV–V, | 62 | 75.8 | 28.5 | NS | NS | MMF: 3.2±1.7; | MMF 1.0–1.5 g/day | Prednisone | 18 | ( |
| interstitial area with inflammatory cell infiltration, UPE ≥2.0 g/day and SCr <355 µmol/l | Control: 2.9±1.5 | (>6m) | 0.8 mg/kg/day (>6m) |
UPE, urinary protein excretion; eGFR, estimated glomerular filter rate; UPCR, urine protein-creatinine ratio; SCr, serum creatinine; CrCl/CCr, creatinine clearance; IgAN, immunoglobulin A nephropathy; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; RASI, renin-angiotensin inhibitors; CTX, cyclophosphamide; LEF, leflunomide; NS, not stated.
Definitions of renal remission in the included trials.
| Author, year | Complete remission | Partial remission | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hou | Undetectable proteinuria and a stable SCr level (≤25% above the baseline) | 0.4<UPE <1.0 g/day, serum albumin level ≥35 g/l, and stable SCr (≤25% above the baseline) | ( |
| Hogg | UPCR <0.2 g/g | UPCR <50% of level at time of randomization | ( |
| Liu | UPE <0.4 g/day, serum albumin >35 g/l and stable renal function | UPE declined from ≥50% of the basal value, with stable renal function | ( |
| Liu | UPE <0.3 g/day, normal levels of serum albumin and SCr and <5/HP RBCs in urinary sediment | UPE 0.3–3.0 g/day or reduced to ≥50% of that before therapy, serum albumin level ≥30 g/l, stable or improved renal function and the decreased RBC count in the urinary sediment | ( |
| Tang | UPE <0.3 g/day | Decline of UPE ≥50% over baseline value, but UPE >0.3 g/day | ( |
| Frisch | NS | ≥50% decrease in proteinuria | ( |
| Chen | UPE <0.2 g/day and normal renal function | ≥50% decrease in proteinuria and SCr decreased to normal level or declined ≥50% of basal level | ( |
SCr, serum creatinine; UPCR, urine protein-creatinine ratio; UPE, urinary protein excretion; HP, high power field; NS, not stated; RBC, red blood cell.
Risk analysis of potential bias.
| Author, year | Adequate sequence generation | Adequate allocation concealment | Blinding | Address incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome report | Free of other bias | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hou | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ( |
| Hogg | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | No | No | Yes | ( |
| Liu | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | ( |
| Liu | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | ( |
| Tang | Unclear | Unclear | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | ( |
| Frisch | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No[ | ( |
| Maes | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | No | No | Unclear | ( |
| Chen | Unclear | Unclear | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | ( |
Yes, low risk of bias; no, high risk of bias; unclear, a judgement could not be made.
The study was terminated early as interim analysis revealed no MMF benefit.
Figure 2.Publication bias. (A) Funnel plots and (B) Egger's regression analysis. RR, risk ratio; s.e., standardized effect.
Figure 3.(A) Meta-analysis of the effect of MMF on renal remission in patients with IgAN; (B) subgroup analysis of renal remission rates according to different therapeutic regimens. MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; IgAN, immunoglobulin A nephropathy; RR, risk ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 4.(A) Meta-analysis of the effect of MMF on ESRD in patients with IgAN; (B) subgroup analysis of ESRD rates according to different therapeutic regimens. MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; ESRD, end-stage renal disease; IgAN, immunoglobulin A nephropathy; RR, risk ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 5.Meta-analysis of the adverse events of therapeutic regimens with and without MMF. MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; RR, risk ratio; CI, confidence interval.