| Literature DB >> 30402748 |
Kioa L Wijnsma1, Caroline Duineveld1,2, Jack F M Wetzels2, Nicole C A J van de Kar3.
Abstract
With the introduction of the complement C5-inhibitor eculizumab, a new era was entered for patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS). Eculizumab therapy very effectively reversed thrombotic microangiopathy and reduced mortality and morbidity. Initial guidelines suggested lifelong treatment and recommended prophylactic use of eculizumab in aHUS patients receiving a kidney transplant. However, there is little evidence to support lifelong therapy or prophylactic treatment in kidney transplant recipients. Worldwide, there is an ongoing debate regarding the optimal dose and duration of treatment, particularly in view of the high costs and potential side effects of eculizumab. An increasing but still limited number of case reports and small cohort studies suggest that a restrictive treatment regimen is feasible. We review the current literature and focus on the safety and efficacy of restrictive use of eculizumab. Our current treatment protocol is based on restrictive use of eculizumab. Prospective monitoring will provide more definite proof of the feasibility of such restrictive treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome; Eculizumab; Personalized medicine; Restrictive treatment regimen; Thrombotic microangiopathy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30402748 PMCID: PMC6794245 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-018-4091-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Eculizumab dosage regimen, standard therapy according to EMA/FDA
| Weight category | Induction phase | Maintenance phase |
|---|---|---|
| Above 40 kg | 900 mg, every week, for 4 weeks | 1200 mg, in fifth week, every 14 days thereafter |
| 30 to < 40 kg | 600 mg, every week, for 2 weeks | 900 mg, in third week, every 14 days thereafter |
| 20 to < 30 kg | 600 mg every week, for 2 weeks | 600 mg, in third week, every 14 days thereafter |
| 10 to < 20 kg | 300 mg once | 300 mg, in second week, every 14 days thereafter |
| 5 to < 10 kg | 300 mg once | 300 mg, in second week, every 31 days thereafter |
Eculizumab has to be administrated intravenously
EMA European Medicines Agency, FDA Food and Drug Administration
Monitoring of eculizumab therapy and complement activity in atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS)
| Parameter | Interpretation | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Serum eculizumab level | Target is set at trough levels of 50–100 μg ml−1 to fully block complement | Reports differ regarding the measurement of only the free proportion of eculizumab [ |
| Eculizumab-C5 complex | In contrast with serum eculizumab levels, one could also determine eculizumab bound to C5, hence only the bound proportion of eculizumab is determined. | It is known that eculizumab can also bind C5b-C9. Furthermore, one eculizumab molecule could bind respectively 1 or 2 C5 molecules, hence the remaining capacity is unknown [ |
| Total complement activity (CH50) | CH50 levels correlated nicely with eculizumab serum trough levels, and suppressed CH50 (< 10%) is reached with trough levels > 30–50 μg ml−1 [ | There are different assays to measure CH50. With this test, total complement activity (also known as CH50) is tested to determine the capacity of patient serum to lyse sheep or chicken erythrocytes coated with antibodies. In the case of a functional complement system, the CP will be activated, consequently leading to C5b-C9 deposition on the erythrocytes and consequently cause hemolysis. With the Wieslab test, CH50 can be measured with C5b-C9 formation, detected using a C9 neoantigen, as read-out [ |
| Alternative pathway activity (AP50) | AP50 levels can be suppressed by eculizumab, however ongoing activation has been noted despite adequate eculizumab levels [ | There are different assays to measure AP50. Specific assessment of alternative pathway activation is possible with a hemolytic assay based on untreated rabbit erythrocytes (AP50). Puissant-Lubrano et al. compared both the hemolytic assays as used in all trials with the Wieslab ELISA in 16 patients treated with eculizumab and found conflicting results [ |
| C3d | C3d is a breakdown product of C3, hence elevated C3d complement levels reflect activation at level of C3 is present. | C3d levels are elevated in acute phase of aHUS and decreased in the majority of patient with eculizumab therapy [ |
| C3 | Can be both normal as decreased in aHUS patients during acute phase and remission | [ |
| C5 | Eculizumab binds to C5. Eculizumab trough levels correlate with C5 levels. | C5 levels fluctuate between and within patients due to among others disease activity [ |
| C5a | C5a is released after cleavage of C5. In the case of eculizumab therapy, C5 cannot be cleaved, hence less C5a is present. | Interestingly, values of C5a do not decrease to zero, although no C5a should be present in light of sufficient eculizumab [ |
| Ex vivo endothelial cell assay | By determining the C5b-C9 deposition after adding patient serum on activated endothelial cells, complement blockade could be assessed with good reproducibility | This assay has one major drawback since it is a highly specialized technique which cannot be easily performed in any laboratory [ |
| Ham test | The Ham test is modified from the assay used to detect PNH. By acidifying the patient serum, AP is activated and results in erythrocyte lysis in PNH. In the modified Ham test, PNH-like cells are incubated with serum of aHUS patients and depending on AP dysregulation present in the serum, will be lysed [ | Merril et al. showed no correlation was seen between positive or negative Ham test, hence the presence of complement activation and aHUS recurrence. Moreover, various patients remained positive with the Ham test without disease recurrence and withdrawal of eculizumab therapy [ |
| Soluble C5b-C9 (TCC) | Soluble C5b-C9 should decrease during eculizumab therapy | Various studies report different results. Due to the ability of eculizumab to bind C5b-C9, it could be possible that these complexes have a lower clearance, hence are elevated during remission [ |
AP alternative complement pathway, CP classical complement pathway, ELISA enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay, PNH paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, TCC terminal complement complex
Studies describing a restrictive eculizumab regimen in aHUS patients
| Author and year of publication | Number of participants | Age (years) | Duration standard eculizumab therapy (months) | Number of participants with tapered therapy | Number of participants in whom therapy was discontinued | Follow-up period after therapy adjustment (months) | Recurrence, number (%) | Time until recurrence (months) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cugno et al. (2014) [ | 18 | Mean 21 (range 2–40) | Up till 40 months | 18; interval was extended up to 4 weeks based on CH50 | 0 | Up till 43 months | 0 | NA | No chronic sequelae |
| Ardissino et al. (2014–2015) [ | 22 | 18 (1–53) | 4.3 months (0.5–14.4) | 0 | 16 | Up till 40 months | 5/16 (31%) | 1.2 months (0.7–16.3) | No chronic sequelae after restart of eculizumab. Serum creatinine and proteinuria returned to baseline values |
| Sheerin et al. (2016) [ | 43 | Unknown | 6 months (0.5–8.5) | 0 | 12 | 12 months | 3/12 (25%) | 2.5 months (1.5–9) | Full renal recovery was seen in 1 patient. The remaining 2 patient were still dialysis dependent on time of withdrawal and presented with hemolysis and hyperkalaemia which resolved quickly with reintroduction of eculizumab. |
| Fakhouri et al. (2017) [ | 108 | 30 (2–79) | 17.5 months (2–50) | 0 | 38 | 22 months (5–23) | 12/38 (31%) | 7.5 months (3–29) | No chronic sequelae after restart of eculizumab |
| Merril et al. (2017) [ | 17 | 46 (19–69) | 3 months (0.5–18.2) | NA | 15 | 10.2 months (1.2–46.3) | 3/15 (20%) | 2 months (1.8–3.3) | 2 patients received eculizumab after which kidney function was restored. 1 patient died during PE for recurrence after non-adherence with antihypertensive drugs. |
| Macia et al. (2017) [ | 6 | 37 (16–39) | 6 months (1–14) | 1; patient received 900 mg every 4 weeks | 5 | Unknown | 4/6 (67%) | 3 months (2–12) | Unknown |
| Wijnsma et al. (2017) [ | 20 | 28 (1–62) | 3.8 months (1.3–14.7) | 5 | 15 | 27.4 months (6–47) | 5/20 (25%) | 7.5 months (1–12) | No chronic sequelae after restart of eculizumab. 1 relapse occurred during tapering eculizumab. |
| Ardissino et al. (2017) [ | 47 | 25 (0.5–60) | 2.6 months (0.4–24.6) | 38 | 9 | 26.9 months (0.8–80.9) | 0 | NA | No chronic sequelae after restart of eculizumab. |
| Macia et al. (2017) [ | 130 | 26 (0–80) | 6.3 months (0.2–53.7) | 0 | 61 | 5.6 months (0–35.1) | 12/61 (20%) | 3 months (1–29.5) | Limited data available. 1 patient progressed to ESRD despite re-initiation of therapy. |
Numbers are expressed as median (range) unless otherwise specified. The different cohort studies and case reports include patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) after kidney transplantation and patients with aHUS due to auto-antibodies directed against complement component factor H
ESRD end-stage renal disease, NA not applicable, PE plasma exchange
Monitoring disease activity in atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) patients
| Characteristics aHUS | Regular workup during eculizumab therapya | Regular workup after therapy withdrawal | Recurrence aHUSb, c |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. (Acute) Kidney injury | Serum creatinine | Serum creatinine | Serum creatinine greater than upper limit of normal per age or increase of > 15% compared with baseline |
| Proteinuria (protein–creatinine ratio) | Proteinuria (protein–creatinine ratio) | Increase of > 25% in proteinuria | |
| Dipstick analyses twice per week at home | |||
| Bloodpressure (aim for P50) | Blood pressure measurement twice per week at home | NA | |
| 2. Thrombocytopenia | Platelets | Platelets | Platelet count < 150,000 × 103 μl |
| 3. Mechanical hemolytic anemia | Mechanical hemolysis is defined by the presence of at least 2 or more of the following criteria | ||
| Hemoglobin | Hemoglobin | Below lowest limit of normal per age | |
| LDH | LDH | Greater than upper limit of normal | |
| Haptoglobin | Haptoglobin | Undetectable | |
| Schizocytes | Schizocytes | Appearance of schizocytes | |
After therapy withdrawal strict monitoring is essential. Regular workup after at least 1,2, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months is required. We would advise to monitor blood pressure at home. We aim for blood pressures around P50 for height and age (children) or < 130/80 mmHg (adults). Urine dipstick analysis at home could be considered, especially in children. Moreover, comprehensible instructions to the patient (and caregivers) when and how to contact their treating physician are essential. In case of signs indicating atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) recurrence such as high blood pressure, petechiae, fatigue, oliguria, jaundice, or a possible triggering event-like infection, the patient has to seek contact immediately. Of note, recurrent aHUS after kidney transplantation can present as a smoldering disease, with a slow increase in serum creatinine without overt systemic hemolysis. A allograft biopsy may disclose only subtle changes, mostly limited to swelling of vascular endothelial cells in capillaries and small arterioles [64]
LDH lactate dehydrogenase, NA not applicable, P50 median percentile for height and age, TMA thrombotic microangiopathy
aConsider to monitor liver enzymes in light of potential hepatotoxicity, especially in patients with pre-existing liver disease
bRecurrece of aHUS is defined by the occurrence of all three characteristics of aHUS; acute kidney injury, thrombocytopenia, and mechanical hemolytic anemia
cA kidney biopsy to detect (smoldering) TMA can be of additional value
Fig. 1Treatment algorithm. After adequate exclusion of other causes of thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) such as thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP), Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli-hemolytic uremic syndrome (STEC-HUS), or secondary TMA and in patients with strong suspicion of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), eculizumab treatment should be started within 24 h after presentation. When the patient is stable and in remission, withdrawal or tapering can be considered, depending on patient characteristics (see Fig. 2). After therapy adjustment, strict monitoring is essential. NB in case of antibodies against complement factor H, a different treatment protocol has to be initiated as described by Loirat et al. [1]. a, For extensive overview of practical diagnostics approach for TMA, see Fakhouri et al. [3]. b, Treatment should preferably be started within 24 h after presentation. In adults with first episode of aHUS in native kidney, treatment with plasma exchange (PE) for 4 days (high volume PE with 1.5 plasma volume) is advised to allow diagnosis of secondary causes of aHUS. Adolescents may be considered adults [33]. After exclusion of secondary causes of aHUS and if the patient does not show a favorable response after 4 days of PE, treatment should be switched to eculizumab. Starting treatment with eculizumab within 7 days after presentation in PE-resistant patients was effective in the clinical trials [32]. In case the patient is PE sensitive, PE should be tapered and discontinued in the course of 1 month [9, 10]. c, Improvement of platelets and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is expected within 2–4 weeks. If no response, consider alternative diagnosis or inefficacy of eculizumab (C5 polymorphism p.Arg885His) [102]. d, See Fig. 2 for the different scenarios to withdraw or taper eculizumab, depending on patient characteristics
Fig. 2Scenarios for the treatment of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) patients with eculizumab. The current standard regime is reflected by scenario 6, lifelong therapy with standard-dose eculizumab at biweekly intervals. Scenarios 1–5 illustrate options of restrictive eculizumab therapy. According to scenario 1, eculizumab is given at standard dose, at biweekly intervals, with withdrawal after 3 months. According to scenario 2, eculizumab dose will be adapted to target trough levels of 50–100 μg ml−1 with complete blockade of the complement system. After an observation period, eculizumab therapy will be withdrawn. In scenario 3, drug withdrawal is preceded by a period of eculizumab therapy at reduced dose and incomplete complement blockade (CH50 < 30%). For logistical reasons, dose reduction will be done by extending the dose interval. In scenarios 4 and 5, treatment with eculizumab will continue for an undefined period (“lifelong,” waiting for more data), either aiming at incomplete (scenario 4) or complete complement blockade (scenario 5). Of note, the observation periods are not strictly defined. The choice for a scenario as well as the length of the observation period will be dependent on patient characteristics, disease history, renal function, and patient or physician preferences. In patients with uncontrolled blood pressure, active (viral or bacterial) infection, reduced estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) with evidence of continuous improvement (i.e., the nadir of serum creatinine has not been reached), or evidence of ongoing (extra-renal) thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) activity, eculizumab treatment should be continued until stable remission is reached. Typical examples of the patient profiles which may best fit a proposed scenario are presented below. To aid the choice for a certain scenario a score can be calculated based on patient characteristics. The sum of the points will guide the selection of a scenario (online resource Table 6). Scenario 1: this is the proposed scenario used in adult patients with a first episode of aHUS in the native kidneys, who have adequately responded to treatment, with well-controlled blood pressure, stable renal function, and no signs of TMA. Scenario 2: this is the proposed scenario used in adults with a first relapse of aHUS in native kidneys, occurring more than 12 months after treatment withdrawal, who have adequately responded to treatment with recovery of eGFR, well-controlled blood pressure, and no signs of TMA. This scenario is also suitable for pediatric patients above 6 years of age and kidney transplant recipients with a relapse after transplantation with no pathogenic mutation. Scenario 3: this is the proposed scenario used in adults with first relapse of aHUS in native kidneys, occurring within 3–12 months after treatment withdrawal, who have adequately responded to treatment with recovery of eGFR, well-controlled blood pressure, and no signs of TMA. This scenario is also suitable for kidney transplant patients with a aHUS recurrence, successfully treated with eculizumab and pathogenic mutations in other genes than CFH. Scenario 4: this is the proposed scenario for patients with multiple relapses and kidney transplant recipients with a relapse (and CFH mutation) in which lifelong therapy is necessary. Scenario 5: this scenario is proposed for adult patients with relapse occurring during treatment with incomplete complement blockade, or with early (< 3 months) relapse after eculizumab withdrawal. This scenario is also used in pediatric patients below 6 years of age. They have an increased risk for frequent relapse since they are exposed to various infectious triggers during childhood. Therefore, withdrawal of eculizumab is not advised, but tapering of therapy to target serum trough levels could be beneficial to limit potential side effects and prevent overtreatment. Scenario 6: this scenario is proposed for patients with relapsing disease while receiving eculizumab therapy at doses targeted to levels of 50–100 μg ml−1. This scenario may also apply to patients with ESRD due to aHUS, with a history of graft failure due to disease recurrence, CFH mutations, or other high-risk factors. In these patients, any risk of recurrence should be avoided. These scenarios illustrate the treatment with eculizumab, as induction therapy for new-onset aHUS, either as first episode in incident patients or as relapse in prevalent patients. Prophylactic therapy with eculizumab in kidney transplant patients is not illustrated. We do not advise prophylactic therapy with eculizumab in each patient with aHUS. Still, we do not exclude the use of prophylactic therapy, in particular in children, in adult patient with a severe disease history, previous graft loss due to recurrence aHUS, genetic mutations in CFH, comorbidity (prior vascular events, known macrovascular disease), or highly sensitized patients. When prophylaxis is considered, we suggest to start with the induction dose 7–10 days before the kidney transplantation with a second dose 0–3 days before transplantation as eculizumab through levels of 50–100 μg ml−1 (and CH50 < 10%) may not yet be reached after the first dose. We would consider continued treatment with eculizumab after successful transplantation according to scenarios 4–6