Literature DB >> 30880917

Clinical efficacy and safety of rituximab in lupus nephritis.

Zhiqing Zhong1, Hongyan Li2, Hongzhen Zhong1, Tianbiao Zhou1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Long-term treatment programs with low toxicity represent a therapeutic challenge in lupus nephritis (LN). Although a therapeutic benefit of rituximab (RTX) has been reported in LN patients who have failed conventional treatment, the results are controversial. We aimed to assess the clinical efficacy and safety of RTX as a new immunosuppressive medicine in the treatment of LN with a meta-analysis.
METHODS: Based on predetermined criteria, PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library were used to identify the eligible studies. Cochrane Review Manager version 5.3 was applied to pool the data extracted from individual investigations and provide summary effect estimates.
RESULTS: Twenty-four studies with 940 patients were analyzed. In case series trials with specific LN assessment, the complete remission (CR) rate at 12 months was 35.9% (95% CI: 24.2%-49.5%), and total remission (TR: CR plus partial remission) was 73.4% (95% CI: 66.0%-79.7%). In controlled trials, RTX was associated with a higher probability of TR (OR =2.02, 95% CI: 1.23-3.32, P<0.01). The CR in the RTX group was higher than that in the control group, although there was no significant difference between the two groups (OR =1.98, 95% CI: 0.90-4.39, P>0.05). Additionally, RTX treatment significantly decreased proteinuria (mean difference: -2.79, 95% CI: -3.95 to -1.62, P<0.01) as well as the renal activity index in patients with LN (mean difference: -3.46, 95% CI: -4.43 to -2.50, P<0.01). In controlled trials, the relative risks of the adverse events of infection and infusion reaction were not notably different between the two groups.
CONCLUSION: RTX is a promising therapy for the treatment of LN due to significant clinical efficacy and a favorable safety profile. In future studies, larger study populations and longer-term time points may identify additional important patient-centered outcomes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  efficacy; lupus nephritis; meta-analysis; rituximab; safety; systemic lupus erythematosus

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30880917      PMCID: PMC6417005          DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S195113

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Des Devel Ther        ISSN: 1177-8881            Impact factor:   4.162


Introduction

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease characterized by multiorgan damage and the production of autoantibodies directed against multiple cellular components.1–3 Lupus nephritis (LN) occurs in up to 60% of adults with SLE, and up to 30% of LN patients progress to end-stage renal disease (ESRD).4,5 ESRD is the most severe manifestation of LN and often requires dialysis or transplantation. The “gold standard” treatment for LN includes mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) as well as corticosteroids and cyclophosphamide (CYC),6 which results in significant morbidity from infections and ovarian failure.7 As a relapsing/remitting autoimmune disease, long-term treatment programs with low levels of toxicity remain a major interventional objective. Lupus B cells are characterized by various alterations in phenotype and clonal expansion, and hyperreactive B cells play a central role through the production of autoantibodies and adverse regulatory effects on mediators of inflammation and general immune functions.8 Rituximab (RTX) is a chimeric antibody which binds specifically to the B-cell surface antigen CD20.9 CD20 protein is expressed on immature and mature B lymphocytes, but it is not found in early B-cell precursors or plasma cells.10 Targeting and transiently depleting B cells is an ideal therapeutic approach for LN. RTX was the first approved agent for the treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory lymphoma, and has subsequently been used for various autoimmune diseases, including LN. Therapeutic benefit of RTX has been reported in LN patients where conventional treatment had failed,11,12 although the randomized controlled trials have failed to identify any superiority to placebo.13 The reasons for RTX failure may include too few patients, strong placebo effects, use of background therapies, heterogeneous outcome measures, heterogeneous patient population, and liberal steroid use. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of RTX as a new immunosuppressive treatment for LN with a meta-analysis of the recent literature.

Materials and methods

Data sources and search terms

The search strategy was designed to identify the full length of studies reporting outcomes of RTX treatment in LN patients. Two independent reviewers performed the searches in the following databases: PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library. PubMed was searched using Medical subheading using the terms “Rituximab” and “Lupus Nephritis” published from January 1, 2000, to October 31, 2018. As per this method, the entry terms for RTX were: Rituximab; Rituxan; CD20 Antibody, Rituximab CD20 Antibody; IDEC C2B8 Antibody; Mabthera; IDEC C2B8; IDEC-C2B8; IDEC-C2B8 Antibody; GP2013. The entry terms for LN were: Lupus Nephritis; Nephritis Lupus; Lupus Glomerulonephritis; Glomerulonephritis Lupus; Glomerulonephritides Lupus; Lupus Nephritides; Nephritides Lupus; Lupus Glomerulonephritides. Similarly, other database searches were conducted using a combination of rituximab and lupus nephritis terms. No language restrictions were applied. Reference lists of the research articles and reviews were screened to manually identify additional articles.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria were: 1) retrospective study, prospective study, or controlled trials (randomized controlled study [RCT], case-control study) indicating the outcomes of RTX therapy in at least seven LN patients; 2) presence of data on therapeutic efficacy and safety; and 3) enrolled patients with a diagnosis of LN disease based on the American College of Rheumatology criteria.

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion criteria were: 1) abstracts, case reports, reviews, and editorials; 2) studies with insufficient details; and 3) duplicate reports from the same study.

Study selection

Two independent investigators were responsible for determining whether the reports were eligible for inclusion in the meta-analysis. To resolve any inconsistencies, the investigators compared lists after reviewing the identified papers. A third investigator resolved any discrepancies to finalize the list of included studies.

Data extraction and data synthesis

A custom Excel sheet was used to collect all the relevant data on the surname of first author, publication year, patient, intervention, and outcome characteristics. Two investigators extracted the data independently. The results were compared and discussed when there was disagreement. The P(opulation) I(ntervention) C(omparison) O(utcome) of the study were defined as follows: P: Patients with LN; I: treated with RTX, MMF, CYC, or placebo/not treatment (P/NT); C: RTX vs MMF, RTX vs CYC, RTX vs P/NT; O: CR: complete remission, TR: total remission (CR plus partial remission), proteinuria, renal activity index (AI), adverse events.

Statistical analysis

All statistical analyses were conducted and Cochrane Review Manager version 5.3 (Cochrane Library, UK) was applied. Two meta-analysis models were constructed. Model 1: CR and TR of the patients to RTX therapy. TR was defined as CR plus partial remission. Model 2: mean change with statistical significance of AI and proteinuria after RTX therapy. The non-comparative percentages of response were pooled by using the method of the inverse of the variance with logit-transformed proportions.14 A fixed-effects model was used to calculate the pooled statistic, and the heterogeneity among the included investigations was detected using I2. A random-effects model was constructed when the P-value from the heterogeneity test was <0.1. Statistical significance was defined as P<0.05.

Results

Search results

Among the 940 publications identified, 24 studies met the inclusion criteria, with 1912,15–32 retrospective or prospective case series and five comparative studies.13,33–36

Characteristics of included studies

The included studies consisted of 24 studies that investigated RTX therapy in 940 LN patients, detailed in Table 1. The studies were conducted between 2005 and 2018, and dose of RTX varied. Some investigators used 375 mg/m2 qid., whereas others used 375 mg/m2 at day 1 and day 15. Doses of 1,000 mg bid. 2 weeks apart, 1,000 mg at day 1 and day 15 every 6 months, and 600 mg qd were also infused in other cohorts.
Table 1

Summary of available information for each study included in the analysis

StudyCountryStudy designNRTX doseAffecting immune drugs addedP dose (mean)F/UClinical outcomeDefinition

Sfikakis et al, 200515GreecePCS104×375 mg/m2P0.5 mg/kg/d for 10 w, tapered by 4 mg every 2 w thereafter12CR: 50% TR: 80%aCR: normal serum creatinine and albumin, inactive urine sediment, urinary protein/24 h <500 mg PR: ≥50% improvement in renal parameters that had been abnormal at baseline, without deterioration in any of them
Vigna-Perez et al, 200516MexicoPCS222×0.5–1 gNMNM3CR: 23% TR: 55%CR: normal serum creatinine, inactive urine sediment, urinary protein/24 h <500 mg PR: >40% improvement in renal parameters that had been abnormal at baseline
Gunnarsson et al, 200717SwedenPCS74×375 mg/m2CYC: 2×0.5 mg/m2, MTP: 4×100–250 mg, P1 mg/kg/d at first week, 0.75 mg/kg/d at second week, 0.5 mg/kg/d at third week then tapered6CR: 43% TR: 86%a
Lindholm et al, 200818SwedenRCS174×375 mg/m2NMNM12CR: 12% TR: 65%a
Boletis et al, 200919GreecePCS104×375 mg/m2MMF: 2 g/d, P0.5 mg/kg/d for 4 w, tapered by 5 mg, either every 2 or 4 w thereafter38CR: 70% TR: 80%a
Melander et al, 200921UKRCS204×375 mg/m2None (but CYC 3 pts)0.7 mg/kg/d at entrance22CR: 35% TR: 60%CR: urinary protein/24 h <500 mg, no hematuria, normal GFR or >50% improvement in GFR PR: >50% decrease in 24 hours proteinuria, GFR stabilization
Pepper et al, 200922UKPCS182×1 gMMF: 1 g/d, MTP: 2×500 mg, P10 mg/d at entrance12CR: 33% TR: 67%CR: normal serum creatinine and albumin, minimal proteinuria (protein: creatinine ratio <50) PR: ≥50% improvement in proteinuria, stabilization, or normalization of serum creatinine
Garcia-Carrasco et al, 201024MexicoRCS132×1 gMTP: 2×500 mg16 mg/d at entrance (dose adjusted during trial)6CR: 38% TR: 76%a
Ramos-Casals et al, 201025SpainRCS494×375 mg/m2 or 2×1 gNMNM26CR: 80%CR: normal serum creatinine and albumin, inactive urine sediment, urinary protein/24 h <500 mg
Catapano et al, 201023UKRCS114×375 mg/m2 (4 pts) 2×1 g (7 pts)CYC: 500 mg MTP: 500–1,000 mg10 mg/d at entrance4CR: 36% TR: 91%CR: stable or reduced serum creatinine, inactive urine sediment, urinary protein/24 h <500 mg PR: stable or reduced serum creatinine, <30 RBC/hpf, urinary protein/24 h 50% reduction
Jónsdóttir et al, 201328SwedenPCS254×375 mg/m2CYC: 2×0.5 g, MMF (2 pts), P0.5 mg/kg/d during the treatment weeks then tapered rapidly thereafter12CR: 16% TR: 56% (6 m) CR: 20% TR: 80% (12 m)CR: inactive urinary sediment, decrease in proteinuria to ≤0.2 g/d, normal, or stable renal function PR: inactive sediment proteinuria ≤0.5 g/day, normal or stable renal function
Davies et al, 201327UKPCS182×1 gCYC: 2×0.5 g, MTP: 2×500 mgNM6CR: 61% TR: 72%a
Condon et al, 201326UKPCS502×1 gMTP: 2×500 mg, MMF: 0.5–1.5 g/dNM12CR: 52% TR: 86%CR: UPC ratio <50 mg/mmol, serum creatinine level ≤115% of baseline PR: UPC ratio <300 mg/mmol with >50% reduction from baseline, serum creatinine level ≤115% of baseline
Tsanyan et al, 201429RussiaPCS451×0.5 g (2 pts) 2×0.5 g (16 pts) 3×0.5 g (1 pts) 4×0.5 g (13 pts) 1×1 g (3 pts) 2×1 g (11 pts)MTP: 6×250–1,000 mgNM6CR: 81% TR: 86%According to the SLICC RA/RE CR: baseline activity score >0 and follow-up score =0 PR: baseline activity score > follow-up score and follow-up score ≠0
Contis et al, 201630FranceRCS174×375 mg/m2 (10 pts) 2×1 g (7 pts)MTP: 100–750 mgNM12CR: 24% TR: 53%CR: normal serum creatinine, inactive urinary sediment, urinary protein/24 h <500 mg PR: >50% improvement in renal parameters
Kotagiri et al, 201631AustraliaPCS141×375 mg/m2AZA (6 pts), MMF (7 pts), CYC (1 pts)NM6CR: 14% TR: 79%CR: normalization of creatinine, albumin, proteinuria, and urinary RBCs PR: >50% improvement in at least 1 parameter, without deterioration in others
Chavarot et al, 201712FranceRCS154×375 mg/m2 (6 pts) 2×1 g (9 pts)PBackground steroids ≤20 mg/d6CR: 27% TR: 80% (6 m) CR: 47% TR: 60% (12 m)CR: UPC ratio <0.5 g/g, normal, or near-normal GFR PR: ≥50% reduction in proteinuria to subnephrotic levels, normal or near-normal GFR
Hogan et al, 201832FranceRCS122×1 gMTP: 500 mg, MMF: 1,200 mg/m2/d0.3, 0.10, 0.0 mg/kg/d at 3, 6, and 12 m6CR: 75% TR: 100% (6 m)CR: 75% TR: 100% (12 m)CR: UPC ratio <5 mg/mg, normal serum creatinine PR: UPC ratio <30 mg/mg, serum creatinine level ≤115% of baseline
Li et al, 200920ChinaPCS19Group 1: 2×1 g (9 pts)Group 2: 2×1 g (10 pts)MTP: 250 mg, P MTP: 250 mg, P, CYC: 1×750 mg30 mg/d for 4 d, 0.5 mg/kg/d for 4 w, then a reduction of 5 mg every 2 w to 5 mg/d for the rest of the studyf12CR: 21% TR: 79%According to the SLICC RA/RE CR: baseline activity score >0 and follow-up score =0PR: baseline activity score > follow-up score and follow-up score ≠0
Moroni et al, 201433ItalyCS54Group 1: 2×1 g (17 pts)None (37 pts)MTP: 3×500–1,000 mg, PMTP: 3×500–1,000 mg, P, MMF (17 pts), CYC (20 pts)0.5–1.75 mg/kg/d for 1 m, then tapered1212CR: 71% TR: 100%CR: 59% TR: 92%CR: serum creatinine <1.2 mg/dL or return to the baseline value, urinary protein/24 h <500 mg, <5 RBC/hpfPR: serum creatinine <1.2 mg/dL or return to the baseline value, urinary protein/24 h 0.5–2 g
Basu et al, 201735IndiaCS44Group 1: 2×375 mg/m2 (17 pts)None (27 pts)MTP: 3×15 mg/kg/d, PMTP: 3×15 mg/kg/d, P, MMF (12 pts), CYC (15 pts)2 mg/kg/d for 1 m, then tapered33CR: 71% TR: 94%CR: 32% TR: 70%CR: urinary protein/24 h ≤0.5 g, inactive urinary sediment, improvement in kidney function determined by GFRPR: ≥50% decrease in baseline proteinuria or proteinuria <1 g/24 h, ≤25% decrease in baseline GFR
Goswami et al, 201836IndiaCS222Group 1: 1.9±0.25 g (22 pts)None (200 pts)MMF (4 pts), CYC (12 pts)MMF: 1.5–3 g/d (61 pts), LDCYC: 6×500 mg (26 pts), HDCYC: 6×750– 1,200 mg (113 pts)NMNM66CR: 73% TR: 91%CR: 66% TR: 83%CR: serum creatinine <1.3 mg/dL, normal urinalysis, urinary protein/24 h <500 mg PR: serum creatinine <1.3 mg/dL, normal urinalysis, ≥50% decrease in baseline proteinuria
Rovin et al, 201213AmericaRCT144Group 1: 4×1 g (72 pts)Placebo (72 pts)MMF: 1.5–3 mg/d, MTP: 2×1,000 mg, then 4×100 mg, P,MMF: 1.5–3 mg/d, MTP: 2×1,000 mg, then 4×100 mg, P0.75 mg/kg/d for 16 d and tapered to ≤10 mg/d by 16 w1212CR: 26% TR: 57%CR: 31% TR: 46%CR: normal serum creatinine level or ≤115% of baseline, inactive urinary sediment, UPC ratio <0.5PR: serum creatinine level ≤115% of baseline, ≤50% RBC/hpf, no red blood cells casts, >50% decrease in UPC ratio
Zhang et al, 201534ChinaRCT84Group 1: 4×375 mg/m2 (42 pts)None (42 pts)MTP: 3×500 mg, P, CYC: 2×800 mgMTP: 3×500 mg, P, CYC: 12×800 mg0.6 mg/kg/d for 4 w, then reduced at 5 mg every week till reached 10 mg/d1212CR: 64% TR: 83%CR: 21% TR: 57%CR: urinary protein/24 h <0.5 g, serum albumin ≥35 g/L, disappearance of LN symptomsPR: urinary protein/24 h <1.5 g, serum albumin ≥30 g/L

Note:

The definition of CR and PR as per Sfikakis et al, 2005.15

Abbreviations: AZA, azathioprine; CR, complete remission; CS, controlled studies; CYC, cyclophosphamide; d, day; F/U, follow-up in months; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; h, hour; HDCYC, high-dose cyclophosphamide; hpf, high-power field; IS, immunosuppressive agents; LDCYC, low-dose cyclophosphamide; m, month; MMF, mycophenolate mophetil; MTP, methylprednisolone (intravenous infusion); N, number of patients with available data for analysis; NM, not mentioned; P, prednisolone; PCS, prospective case series; PR, partial remission; pts, patients; RBC, red blood cells; RCS, retrospective case series; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RTX, rituximab; SLICC RA/RE, systemic lupus international collaborating clinics renal activity/response exercise; TR, total remission; CR+PR, ; UPC, urine protein-to-creatinine; w, week.

Meta-analysis results

Case series with specific LN assessment

Nineteen case series trials12,15–32 in patients with LN met our inclusion criteria. All studies used renal values as criteria to assess clinical outcome and define CR and TR. Based on renal outcome, the pooled percentage using logit-transformed proportions of TR was 72.9% (95% CI: 67.3%–77.8%; Figure 1). The pooled percentage of CR at 12 months was 35.9% (95% CI: 24.2%–49.5%; Figure 1), and the pooled percentage of TR at 12 months was 73.4% (95% CI: 66.0%–79.7%; Figure 1).
Figure 1

Results of the meta-analysis of remission in LN patients treated with rituximab in case series trials.

Abbreviation: LN, lupus nephritis.

Controlled trials

Five controlled trials13,33–36 analyzed clinical remission as an outcome. RTX was associated with a higher probability of TR (OR =2.02, 95% CI: 1.23–3.32, P<0.01; Figure 2). The CR in the RTX group was higher than that in control group, although there was no significant difference between the two groups (OR =1.98, 95% CI: 0.90–4.39, P>0.05; Figure 2). The CR and TR at 12 months were calculated and the pooled ORs for CR and TR were 2.03 (95% CI: 0.54–7.64, P>0.05; Figure 2) and 2.09 (95% CI: 1.23–3.57, P<0.01; Figure 2), respectively. This result indicates that treatment with RTX was associated with a higher TR.
Figure 2

Results of the meta-analysis of remission in LN patients treated with rituximab in controlled trials.

Abbreviations: LN, lupus nephritis; RTX, rituximab.

Change in proteinuria

Proteinuria was used to evaluate renal injury in five studies.19,21,22,27,32 RTX treatment decreased proteinuria (mean difference =−2.79, 95% CI: −3.95 to −1.62, P<0.01; Figure 3).
Figure 3

Results of meta-analysis of proteinuria in LN patients treated with rituximab.

Abbreviation: LN, lupus nephritis.

Change in renal activity index

Renal AI is determined by morphologic alteration in renal biopsy, and the maximum score is 24 points. Four studies17,21,28,29 used AI to evaluate pathological renal changes (Figure 4). These trials mostly included patients with active LN despite treatment, WHO or International Society of Nephrology/Renal Pathology Association class III (eight patients), IV (33 patients), III–V (one patient), IV–V (seven patients). Twelve patients had class V LN. In all patients, there was a significant reduction in AI following RTX treatment (mean difference =−3.46; 95% CI: −4.43 to −2.50, P<0.01).
Figure 4

Results of meta-analysis of activity renal index in LN patients treated with rituximab.

Abbreviation: LN, lupus nephritis.

Adverse events

In the case series trials,12,15–32 97 (24.7%) patients suffered adverse events. Sixty-two (15.8%) patients had a total of 69 infections: 14 respiratory infections, ten urinary tract infections, three osteoarticular infections, four sepsis, ten herpes zoster, and one pneumococcal meningitis. Fifteen (3.8%) patients developed an infusion reaction. Two posterior reversible leukoencephalopathies and eight cases of neutropenia were observed. Three patients died during the follow-up period (due to invasive histoplasmosis, complications of surgery, and disease progression). In the controlled trials,13,33,35,36 the relative risks of the following adverse events were not significantly different between RTX and other immunosuppressive agents (CYC/MMF): infection, 0.81 (95% CI: 0.46–1.43, P>0.05) and infusion reaction, 2.18 (95% CI: 0.43–10.98, P>0.05).

Discussion

The renal injury associated with SLE gradually progresses from early mild lesions to glomerular sclerosis and is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the affected individuals.37 Therefore, it is critical to initiate induction therapy with the best possible clinical efficacy at a very early stage of LN. The primary goals of LN management are renal remission with minimal toxic effects.38 In LN, B cells, attracted by the accumulative of immune complexes, migrate from the circulation into the renal tubule.39 These B cells then undergo clonal expansion in response to local antigens, which perpetuates a cycle of interstitial inflammation and damage.40 B-cell depletion therapies reduce immune complexes in both serum and kidney, and RTX has been of interest for use in LN as a chimeric anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody. Li et al20 found that RTX monotherapy appeared to be effective in the induction therapy of patients with LN, and the addition of CYC had no additional beneficial effect. Our findings indicate therapeutic efficacy of RTX in LN patients. RTX resulted in a higher TR than the control group. It significantly decreased renal AI as well as proteinuria, suggesting that RTX therapy may prevent the development of organ damage, at least over the short term. The findings of this meta-analysis were consistent with a previous study evaluating the comparative effects of CYC, azathioprine, MMF, methotrexate, and cyclosporin in 164 patients with biopsy-proven LN.41 In that meta-analysis, RTX was ranked as the most effective therapy for LN patients, especially for refractory patients when compared to standard treatment or patients who experience a new flare-up after intensive immunosuppressive treatment. Similarly, a recent meta-analysis demonstrated that RTX induced remission of LN in patients who do not enter remission with standard therapies.42 Our present study had several strengths, including the larger size of the sample and the new follow-up subgroup analyses, which allowed for a more accurate assessment of LN. Autoreactive pathogenic B cells may persist in an environment of high B-cell activating factor (BAFF), such as kidney tubulointerstitium, even with adequate peripheral B-cell depletion.43 These cells cannot be easily measured (B-cell depletion was defined as absolute B-cell count ≤0.05×109/L, and repletion as B-cell count >0.05×109/L post-depletion) and may lead to continued kidney injury. At 6 weeks post-RTX administration, complete depletion is regarded as a marker of good response to therapy.44 A 4-year observational study reported that B cells in the kidney tubulointerstitium are resistant to depletion with RTX.45 This process may require an extended period to reduce the expression of B cells in the kidney and observe a significant effect on CR. There is variability in peripheral blood B-cell depletion after RTX therapy, and treatment with anti-CD20 agents can be informed by B-cell monitoring to achieve greater efficacy and duration of effects, as well as a shorter time to complete depletion. Combinations of symptoms and clinical manifestations of LN can vary widely among affected patients, and assessment and standardization of renal response to treatment remain a challenge.46 The proper assessment of disease activity and damage accrual is dependent upon composite response indices. Repeated renal biopsies may be fundamental for evaluating the efficacy and prognosis of patients with nephritis.47 Patients who do not achieve CR most often exhibit an insignificant reduction in proteinuria levels. Compared to 24-hour urine protein, spot protein/creatinine ratio is more effective at monitoring high levels due to the relatively short collection interval.48 Therefore, it is necessary to dialectically interpret the laboratory data.

Limitations

There were some limitations in this study. Only two RCTs and three case-control studies with various baseline regimens (MMF+ steroids or CYC+ steroids or steroids alone) were included in the meta-analysis, and these different regimens were not analyzed separately. Furthermore, the definition of complete and partial response used in each of the controlled trials was not same, and this could have introduced heterogeneity among the included studies. While some trials lasted several years, most were 6–12 months long, and this has led to considerable uncertainty in the impact of treatment on the outcomes of these patients and has prevented patients and clinicians from evaluating the relative balance of treatment benefits and risk.

Conclusion

RTX is a promising therapeutic agent for LN treatment. However, in future studies, larger study populations and longer-term end points should be assessed to identify additional important patient-centered outcomes.
  48 in total

1.  Remission of proliferative lupus nephritis following B cell depletion therapy is preceded by down-regulation of the T cell costimulatory molecule CD40 ligand: an open-label trial.

Authors:  P P Sfikakis; J N Boletis; S Lionaki; V Vigklis; K G Fragiadaki; A Iniotaki; H M Moutsopoulos
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  2005-02

2.  Long-term efficacy and safety of rituximab in refractory and relapsing systemic lupus erythematosus.

Authors:  Fausta Catapano; Afzal N Chaudhry; Rachel B Jones; Kenneth G C Smith; David W Jayne
Journal:  Nephrol Dial Transplant       Date:  2010-05-11       Impact factor: 5.992

3.  Rituximab and mycophenolate mofetil for relapsing proliferative lupus nephritis: a long-term prospective study.

Authors:  John N Boletis; Smaragde Marinaki; Chryssanthe Skalioti; Sofia S Lionaki; Aliki Iniotaki; Petros P Sfikakis
Journal:  Nephrol Dial Transplant       Date:  2009-01-29       Impact factor: 5.992

4.  Anti-CD20 therapy in patients with refractory systemic lupus erythematosus: a longitudinal analysis of 52 Hispanic patients.

Authors:  M Garcia-Carrasco; C Mendoza-Pinto; M Sandoval-Cruz; E Soto-Vega; A Beltran-Castillo; M Jimenez-Hernandez; D Graillet; L Gonzalez; J Rojas-Rodriguez; A Pineda-Almazana; L Zamudio-Huerta; A Lopez-Colombo
Journal:  Lupus       Date:  2009-12-04       Impact factor: 2.911

5.  Rituximab is an effective treatment for lupus nephritis and allows a reduction in maintenance steroids.

Authors:  Ruth Pepper; Megan Griffith; Chris Kirwan; Jeremy Levy; David Taube; Charles Pusey; Liz Lightstone; Tom Cairns
Journal:  Nephrol Dial Transplant       Date:  2009-07-17       Impact factor: 5.992

6.  Rituximab in severe lupus nephritis: early B-cell depletion affects long-term renal outcome.

Authors:  Catherine Melander; Marion Sallée; Pierre Trolliet; Sophie Candon; Xavier Belenfant; Eric Daugas; Phillipe Rémy; Virginie Zarrouk; Evangéline Pillebout; Christian Jacquot; Jean-Jacques Boffa; Alexandre Karras; Virginie Masse; Philippe Lesavre; Caroline Elie; Isabelle Brocheriou; Bertrand Knebelmann; Laure-Hélène Noël; Fadi Fakhouri
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2009-03-04       Impact factor: 8.237

7.  Histopathologic and clinical outcome of rituximab treatment in patients with cyclophosphamide-resistant proliferative lupus nephritis.

Authors:  Iva Gunnarsson; Birgitta Sundelin; Thorunn Jónsdóttir; Stefan H Jacobson; Elisabet Welin Henriksson; Ronald F van Vollenhoven
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  2007-04

8.  Is combination rituximab with cyclophosphamide better than rituximab alone in the treatment of lupus nephritis?

Authors:  Edmund K Li; Lai-Shan Tam; Tracy Y Zhu; Martin Li; Catherine L Kwok; Tena K Li; Ying Ying Leung; Kong Chiu Wong; Cheuk Chun Szeto
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2009-05-28       Impact factor: 7.580

9.  Longterm clinical and immunological effects of anti-CD20 treatment in patients with refractory systemic lupus erythematosus.

Authors:  Catharina Lindholm; Katharina Börjesson-Asp; Kiandokht Zendjanchi; Anna-Carin Sundqvist; Andrej Tarkowski; Maria Bokarewa
Journal:  J Rheumatol       Date:  2008-04-01       Impact factor: 4.666

10.  Clinical and immunological effects of Rituximab in patients with lupus nephritis refractory to conventional therapy: a pilot study.

Authors:  Mónica Vigna-Perez; Berenice Hernández-Castro; Octavio Paredes-Saharopulos; Diana Portales-Pérez; Lourdes Baranda; Carlos Abud-Mendoza; Roberto González-Amaro
Journal:  Arthritis Res Ther       Date:  2006-05-05       Impact factor: 5.156

View more
  5 in total

1.  Differences and similarities of proliferative and non-proliferative forms of biopsy-proven lupus nephritis: Single centre, cross-disciplinary experience.

Authors:  Emine Duran; Tolga Yıldırım; Arzu Taghiyeva; Emre Bilgin; Mustafa Arıcı; Emine Arzu Sağlam; Seza Özen; Meral Üner; Yunus Erdem; Umut Kalyoncu; Ali Ihsan Ertenli
Journal:  Lupus       Date:  2022-06-03       Impact factor: 2.858

Review 2.  Rituximab in glomerular diseases: a case series and narrative review.

Authors:  Inês Duarte; João Oliveira; Cristina Outerelo; Iolanda Godinho; Marta Pereira; Paulo Fernandes; Sofia Jorge; Joana Gameiro
Journal:  J Bras Nefrol       Date:  2022 Apr-Jun

3.  Comprehensive Analysis of Clinical Trials Registration for Lupus Nephritis Therapy on ClinicalTrials.gov.

Authors:  Yanfang Gao; Yuhan Wang; Rongshan Li; Xiaoshuang Zhou
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-06-17

Review 4.  Perspectives on how mucosal immune responses, infections and gut microbiome shape IgA nephropathy and future therapies.

Authors:  Jia-Wei He; Xu-Jie Zhou; Ji-Cheng Lv; Hong Zhang
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2020-09-15       Impact factor: 11.556

Review 5.  Induction and Maintenance Treatment of Lupus Nephritis: A Comprehensive Review of Meta-Analyses.

Authors:  Jae Il Shin; Han Li; Seoyeon Park; Jae Won Yang; Keum Hwa Lee; Yongsuk Jo; Seongeun Park; Jungmin Oh; Hansol Kim; Hyo Jin An; Gahee Jeong; Haerang Jung; Hyun Jung Lee; Jae Seok Kim; Seoung Wan Nam; Ai Koyanagi; Louis Jacob; Jimin Hwang; Dong Keon Yon; Seung-Won Lee; Kalthoum Tizaoui; Andreas Kronbichler; Ji Hong Kim; Lee Smith
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-01-11       Impact factor: 4.241

  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.