| Literature DB >> 30756248 |
Haresh Selvaskandan1, Chee Kay Cheung1, Masahiro Muto1, Jonathan Barratt2.
Abstract
IgA nephropathy is an inflammatory renal disease characterised by the deposition of IgA in the glomerular mesangium and is the most commonly reported primary glomerulonephritis worldwide. Thirty to forty percent of patients with the disease develop progressive renal function decline, requiring renal replacement therapy within two decades of diagnosis. Despite this, accurate individual risk stratification at diagnosis and predicting treatment response remains a challenge. Furthermore, there are currently no disease specific treatments currently licensed to treat the condition due to long standing challenges in the nature and prevalence of the disease. Despite this, there have been exciting recent advances in the field that may represent paradigm shifts in the way IgA nephropathy is managed in the near future. In this review, we explore the evidence base informing current approaches to management and explore new strategies and future directions in the diagnosis and management of IgA nephropathy.Entities:
Keywords: Berger’s disease; IgA nephropathy; Novel treatments; Repurposed therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30756248 PMCID: PMC6469670 DOI: 10.1007/s10157-019-01700-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Nephrol ISSN: 1342-1751 Impact factor: 2.801
Fig. 1Targets of novel/repurposed drugs. Target 1: B-lymphocyte activation results in the production IgA1 poorly O-glycosylated at the hinge region (gd-IgA1, highlighted in red). This results in the generation of auto-antibodies, which leads to the formation of immune complexes. The deposition of immune complexes in the mesangium will lead to varying degrees of inflammation and fibrosis. Atacicept, blisibimod, TRF-budesonide, bortezomib and microbiome modulation can modulate B-lymphocyte activity, which may theoretically lead to a reduction in the production of Gd-IgA1, the auto-antibodies and circulating immune complexes. Target 2: Acthar, avacopan, OMS721 and LNP023 all act in the kidney to suppress local inflammation and subsequent fibrosis, dampening the downstream consequences of immune complex deposition. Fostamatinib acts both at the level of the B-cell and directly in the kidney reducing the inflammatory response to IgA deposition. IgA1 proteases are capable of digesting both circulating and deposited IgA and IgA immune complexes
Clinical trials of novel/repurposed drugs in IgAN for which results are awaited
| Trial | Intervention | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | Trial design | Primary end point | Follow-up duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atacicept | Atacicept at varying doses vs placebo | Proteinuria 1–6 g/day | Prior cyclophosphamide treatment | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Incidence of adverse events | 180 weeks |
| BRIGHT-SC | Blisibimod vs placebo | Proteinuria 1–6 g/day | Immunosuppressant use over last 6 months or corticosteroid use over last 3 months. Malignancy over last 5 years | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Reduction of proteinuria at 24 weeks | 104 weeks |
| SIGN | Fostamatinib at varying doses vs placebo | Stabilised on RASi for 90 days. BP < 130/80 | Recent use of corticosteroids, cyclophosphamide, mycophenolate mofetil, azathioprine or rituximab | Randomised, multicentre, double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase II trial | Reduction of proteinuria at 24 weeks | 24 weeks |
| VELCADE | Bortezomib | Proteinuria > 1 g/day | Peripheral neuropathy, history of cardiac problems, malignancy within last 3 years | Open-label, Phase IV trial | Reduction of proteinuria at 1 year | 1 year |
| ACTHAR | Acthar gel | Proteinuria > 1 g/day | Crohn’s disease or celiac sprue | Open-label, Phase III trial | Reduction in proteinuria at 1 year, stabilisation of eGFR at 1 year | 1 year |
| OMS721 | OMS721 vs placebo | Patients on immunosuppressive patients included, if on stable dose for 2 months | Renal transplant | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase II trial | Incidence of adverse events | 18 weeks |
| LNP023 | LNP023 vs placebo | Stabilised on RASi for 90 days | Recent use of immunosuppression, history of drug/alcohol abuse, malignancy | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase IIa/IIb trial | Reduction of proteinuria at 90 days | 180 Days |
All RCTs required adult patients to have biopsy proven IgAN as part of their inclusion criteria, and excluded patients with secondary IgAN, liver disease, infections, and pregnant/breast feeding women. All trials, except SIGN trial, explicitly stated exclusion if evidence of significant glomerular/cortical scarring was present on biopsy
RASi renin–angiotensin system inhibition, IgAV IgA vasculitis/Henoch–Schonlein purpura
Clinical trials of novel/repurposed drugs in IgAN for which results have been published
| Trial | Intervention | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | Trial design | Primary end point | Follow-up | Sample size | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avacopan | Avacopan 30 mg twice daily | After 4 weeks of optimised RASi | Proteinuria > 8 g/day, Malignancy within 5 years, cardiac disease, immunosuppression in last 24 weeks. HSP within last 2 years | Open-label Phase II trial | Incidence of adverse events | 12 weeks | 7 | Reduction of proteinuria in 6 of 7 patients |
| Rituximab | Rituximab + supportive care vs supportive care alone | After 2 months of optimised RASi | eGFR < 30 | Randomised, open-label, multicentre, Phase IV trial | Proteinuria and eGFR at 12 months | 12 months | 34, American | No effect on end points |
| NEFIGAN | TRF-budesonide 8 mg or 16 mg + supportive care vs supportive care alone | After 6 months of optimised RASi | Immunosuppression over previous 24 months, or at any time for IgAN | Randomised, multicentre, double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase II trial | Urine PCR at 9 months and 12 months | 12 months | 149, European | Reduction in urine PCR achieved by budesonide |
All RCTs required adult patients to have biopsy proven IgAN as part of their inclusion criteria, and excluded patients with secondary IgAN, liver disease, infections, and pregnant/breast feeding women. The rituximab trial explicitly stated exclusion of if evidence of significant glomerular/cortical scarring was present on biopsy
RASi renin–angiotensin system inhibition