| Literature DB >> 30986126 |
Richard Phelps1, Jonathan A Winston2, Daniel Wynn3, Mario Habek4, Hans-Peter Hartung5, Eva Kubala Havrdová6, Glen S Markowitz7, David H Margolin8, Claudio E Rodriguez9, Darren P Baker10, Alasdair J Coles11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autoimmune disorders including nephropathies have been reported more frequently in alemtuzumab-treated multiple sclerosis (MS) patients than in the general population.Entities:
Keywords: Alemtuzumab; anti-glomerular basement membrane disease; disease-modifying therapy; membranous glomerulonephropathy; multiple sclerosis; nephropathy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30986126 PMCID: PMC6681440 DOI: 10.1177/1352458519841829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler ISSN: 1352-4585 Impact factor: 6.312
Summary of routine renal safety monitoring within the alemtuzumab CDP and post-marketing.
| Renal monitoring within the CDP |
|---|
| ● Monitoring of renal function in CAMMS223 initially included
quarterly serum creatinine testing[ |
| Renal monitoring post-marketing |
| ● Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy in the United States
and Risk Management Plan in the European Union and other
regions, including healthcare professional and patient
education[ |
CDP: clinical development program; GBM: glomerular basement membrane.
Figure 1.Cases of nephropathy associated with alemtuzumab treatment in MS patients. The nephropathy cases are shown chronologically based on date of diagnosis, and divided according to disease type (anti-GBM disease, anti-GBM antibodies, MGN, and nephritis) and renal outcome. The five cases occurring within the CDP resolved with normal renal function (patients C–F and J). The three cases of anti-GBM disease occurring during off-label use (patients A, B, and G) resulted in end-stage renal disease (ESRD; highlighted in orange). The eight post-marketing cases (patients H, I, and K–P) require further follow-up to determine outcomes; four of these eight cases (patients H, I, K, and O) involved possible immunological renal disease where full information could not be obtained; patients I and O had probable anti-GBM disease, but insufficient information was available to confirm this diagnosis. Patient A (index case) was diagnosed in April 2003 and reported in 2006.[1] Dates of diagnosis for the other cases were: patient B, March 2005; patient C, September 2008; patient D, October 2010; patient E, January 2011; patient F, April 2012; patient G, July 2012; patient H, July 2014; patient I, during 2015; patient J, August 2015; patient K, September 2016; patient L, December 2016; patient M, March 2017; patient N, April 2017; patient O, date unknown (reported May 2017); patient P, date unknown (reported June 2017).
CDP: clinical development program; GBM: glomerular basement membrane; MGN: membranous glomerulonephropathy.
Cases of anti-GBM disease.
| Patient | Age at diagnosis; gender | Context | Cumulative | Onset from last alemtuzumab dose (months) | First symptoms to treatment for nephropathy (weeks) | Symptoms | Serum creatinine, µmol/L (mg/dL)[ | Hematuria | Serum anti-GBM antibody | Renal pathology | Treatment for nephropathy | Renal outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 42; F | Investigator-sponsored pilot study | 100 | 9 | < 1 | Peripheral edema, fever, malaise, reduced urine output | 495 (5.6) | Yes | Yes | Crescentic glomerulonephritis (95% crescents) and linear IgG deposition along GBM | Plasmapheresis, corticosteroids, cyclophosphamide | Renal transplant |
| B | 34; F | Investigator-sponsored pilot study | 160 | 24 | ~4[ | Fatigue, weight gain, influenza-like illness, dark urine, edema | 972 (11) | Yes | Yes | Severe crescentic glomerulonephritis and linear IgG deposition along GBM | Plasmapheresis (5 months), steroids, mycophenolate mofetil | Dialysis; renal transplant 12 months after diagnosis |
| C | 35; F | CAMMS223 | 96 | 39 | 5 | Proteinuria detected by screening in context of upper respiratory tract infection and rash on thighs | 230 (2.6)[ | Yes | Not detected | Necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis (16% crescents) and linear IgG deposition along GBM | Plasmapheresis (every other day for 3 weeks), cyclophosphamide (cumulative dose of approximately 13.5 g over 6 months), and prednisone (for 6 months) | GFR was normal (>60 mL/min) at last follow-up (26 months
after diagnosis)[ |
| G | 30; F | Independent, off-label physician use | 168 | ~24 | 16 | Proteinuria detected by screening | 62 (0.7) | Yes | Yes | Crescentic glomerulonephritis (15% crescents at diagnosis) and linear IgG along GBM. A subsequent biopsy found ⩾ 50% glomeruli globally sclerotic | Plasmapheresis (3×/week), prednisone, corticotropin, cyclophosphamide (1268 mg; 5 cycles) | On dialysis (6 months after diagnosis), followed by renal transplant; normal renal function post-transplant |
| M | 38; M | Post-marketing | 96 | 3 | < 2 | Weight loss, anuria, peripheral edema, elevated serum creatinine, hematuria, proteinuria, hemoptysis, pleural effusion | 948 (10.7) | Yes | Yes | Severe nephritis; hemorrhagic infarction of the renal cortex; no glomeruli on IF imaging | Dialysis, plasmapheresis, daily cyclophosphamide, steroids; subsequently, cyclophosphamide (oral, 75 mg/day), methylprednisolone (IV, 1 g x3), then prednisone (60 mg/day) and plasmapheresis daily (10 doses total). Prednisone and cyclophosphamide were continued; other drugs included ergocalciferol and ranitidine | At most recent follow-up (7 weeks after diagnosis), patient receiving dialysis 3x/week; serum creatinine elevated |
| N | 30; F | Post-marketing | 96 | 6 | < 2 | Headache, nausea, lethargy, renal failure | N/A | N/A | Yes | Extensive renal injury; 98% crescentic glomerulonephritis | Plasma exchange, dialysis, rituximab | At most recent follow-up (3 weeks after diagnosis) symptoms of renal failure ongoing |
| P | N/A; N/A | Post-marketing | N/A | N/A | N/A | Anti-GBM disease (no prior symptoms reported) | N/A | N/A | Yes | Significant renal damage | Hemodialysis | Awaiting further follow-up |
F: female; GBM: glomerular basement membrane; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; IF: immunofluorescence; IgG: immunoglobulin G; M: male; N/A: not available.
Cases were classified as anti-GBM disease where a renal biopsy demonstrated crescentic glomerulonephritis with linear deposition of IgG, or severe nephritis without interpretable IF imaging but high levels of circulating anti-GBM antibodies.
Serum creatinine measurement at, or closest to, time of nephropathy event.
Patient B was treated in the month following diagnosis.
Value based on unscheduled lab measurement not reflected in Figure 2.
Figure 2.Serum creatinine over time for nephropathy cases occurring during the CDP. Black arrows indicate alemtuzumab treatment courses. Horizontal dashed line indicates upper limit of normal established in each testing laboratory using differently calibrated control levels. Months shown are from first alemtuzumab treatment. Scale of horizontal axes varies due to differing timing of treatment and event onset in each patient. Patient F received subcutaneous interferon beta-1a (44 µg 3× weekly) in the CAMMS223 trial (Month 0 to Month 36) before receiving alemtuzumab.
CDP: clinical development program.
Figure 4.Renal biopsy findings. (a) Patient C: by light microscopy, a glomerulus exhibits a segmental cellular crescent (yellow arrow), characteristic of anti-GBM disease (trichrome, 400× magnification). (b) Patient C: immunofluorescence reveals linear staining of the GBM for IgG, diagnostic of anti-GBM disease (300× magnification). (c) Patient E: by light microscopy, a glomerulus appears unremarkable in this patient with stage 1 MGN (400× magnification). (d) Patient E: immunofluorescence reveals granular global staining of the GBM (300× magnification). (e) Patient E: electron microscopy reveals global small subepithelial electron dense deposits, without significant intervening GBM spikes, diagnostic of stage 1 MGN (5000× magnification). (f) Patient F: similar to patient E, stage 1 changes of MGN are seen on ultrastructural evaluation of the biopsy on patient F (5000× magnification). GBM: glomerular basement membrane; MGN: membranous glomerulonephropathy.
Cases in which anti-GBM antibodies occurred without typical anti-GBM disease.
| Patient | Age at diagnosis; gender | Context | Cumulative dose (mg) | Onset from last alemtuzumab dose (months) | First symptoms to treatment for nephropathy (weeks) | Symptoms | Serum creatinine, µmol/L (mg/dL)[ | Hematuria | Serum anti-GBM antibody | Renal pathology | Treatment for nephropathy | Renal outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| D | 25; F | CARE-MS extension study (previously CARE-MS I) | 132 | 4 | 14 | Hematuria, proteinuria | 58 (0.7) | Yes | Yes | Weak evidence for mild, stage 1 MGN, linear staining of GBM
for IgG and lambda[ | Fosinopril, plasmapheresis, methylprednisolone (500 mg IV), prednisolone (60 mg), cyclophosphamide, omeprazole | At last follow-up (39 months after diagnosis), patient in remission without clinical sequelae and with preserved renal function |
| J | 36; M | CARE-MS extension study (previously CARE-MS II) | 96 | 60 | N/A | Fever | 124 (1.4) | No | Yes | N/A | No treatment required | At last follow-up (32 months after event), kidney function and serum creatinine levels normal |
| L | 34; F | Post-marketing | 96 | 6 | <1 | Anemia; pulmonary hemorrhage, febrile episodes; elevated serum creatinine; oliguria, acute kidney injury; low GFR | 469 (5.3) | Yes | Yes | 1 early crescent and 1 cellular crescent; biopsy also suggested possible ANCA-negative pauci-immune vasculitis | Hemodialysis (3×/week) and plasma exchange (2×/week), then treatment ongoing: Hemodialysis (3x/week) and plasma exchange (2x/week), prednisolone, mycophenolate | Unknown |
GBM: glomerular basement membrane; MGN: membranous glomerulonephropathy; IgG: immunoglobulin G; F: female; M: male; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; ANCA: antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody.
Serum creatinine measurement at, or closest to, time of nephropathy event.
Pathology findings based on limited biopsy material.
Figure 3.Urine protein (dipstick test) over time for nephropathy cases occurring during the CDP. Urine protein was not available for patient C (routine monitoring was modified to include urinalysis following this case). Black arrows indicate alemtuzumab treatment courses. Numbering on vertical axes refers to number of pluses from dipstick score. Months shown are from first alemtuzumab treatment. Scale of horizontal axes varies due to differing timing of treatment and event onset in each patient. Patient F received subcutaneous interferon beta-1a (44 µg 3× weekly) in the CAMMS223 trial (Month 0 to Month 36) before receiving alemtuzumab.
CDP: clinical development program.
Cases of MGN.
| Patient | Age at diagnosis; gender | Context | Cumulative dose (mg) | Onset from last alemtuzumab dose (months) | First symptoms to treatment for nephropathy (weeks) | Symptoms | Serum creatinine, µmol/L (mg/dL)[ | Hematuria | Serum anti-GBM antibody | Renal pathology | Treatment for nephropathy | Renal outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| E | 27; F | CARE-MS II | 96 | 5 | 7 | Peripheral edema, hematuria, proteinuria, low serum albumin | 62 (0.7) | Yes | Not detected | Stage 1 MGN | Furosemide (20 mg at diagnosis, increased to 40 mg 2 months later) and lisinopril (5 mg/day); then received furosemide (80 mg; three times/day), valsartan (160 mg/day), metolazone (2.5 mg every other day), and oral potassium chloride for nephrotic syndrome until 45 months after diagnosis; receiving potassium chloride at last follow-up | At last follow-up (67 months after diagnosis), MGN resolved; GFR normal and minimal proteinuria |
| F | 58; F | CARE-MS extension study (previously received SC IFNB-1a in CAMMS223) | 96 | 13 | 3.5 | Leg edema, hematuria, proteinuria | 90–94 (1.0–1.1) | Yes | Not detected | MGN (mainly stage 1), subcapsular scarring consistent with arterionephrosclerosis, with superimposed renal atheroembolic disease | Diuretics and albumin for nephrotic syndrome; subsequently oral perindopril and hydrochlorthiazide (4/1.25 mg once daily) | At last follow-up (21 months after diagnosis), patient in
remission without clinical sequelae, preserved renal
function |
MGN: membranous glomerulonephropathy; F: female; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; SC IFNB-1a: subcutaneous interferon beta-1a.
Serum creatinine measurement at, or closest to, time of nephropathy event.
Cases of possible immunological renal disease where full information could not be obtained.
| Patient | Age at diagnosis; gender | Context | Cumulative alemtuzumab dose (mg) | Onset from last alemtuzumab dose (months) | First symptoms to treatment for nephropathy (weeks) | Symptoms | Serum creatinine, µmol/L (mg/dL)[ | Hematuria | Serum anti-GBM antibody | Renal pathology | Treatment for nephropathy | Renal outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H | 30; F | Post-marketing | 96 | 29 | N/A | Elevated serum creatinine, proteinuria | 5500 (62.2) | N/A | N/A | Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis initially suggested; revised to proteinuria | N/A | N/A |
| I[ | N/A; M | Post-marketing | 60 | 11–12 | N/A | Elevated serum creatinine, chest infection (resolved), renal problems | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Plasma exchange | N/A |
| K | 27; F | Post-marketing | 60 | 1 | N/A | Proteinuria, hematuria | 54 (0.6) | Yes | No | Subcapsular scar with ischemic glomeruli; no crescents | N/A | N/A |
| O[ | N/A; F | Post-marketing | N/A | 10.5 | N/A | History of urinary tract infection, raised albumen, urinalysis abnormal, dark urine | Within normal range | N/A | Yes | N/A | Plasma exchange, cyclophosphamide, dialysis | N/A |
GBM: glomerular basement membrane; F: female; M: male; N/A: not available.
Serum creatinine measurement at, or closest to, time of nephropathy event.
Patients I and O had probable anti-GBM disease, but insufficient information was available to confirm this diagnosis.
MS status of patients within the CDP.
| Patient | Date of alemtuzumab | Date of alemtuzumab | Date of alemtuzumab | Date of nephropathy event[ | EDSS score at study baseline (date) | EDSS score at most recent visit (date) | ARR from baseline to most recent visit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | June 2004 | June 2005 | September 2008 (39) | 0 (May 2004) | 2.0 (June 2009) | 0.2 | |
| D | May 2008 | May 2009 | June 2010 | October 2010 (4) | 2.5 (May 2008) | 1.5 (September 2016) | 0 |
| E | September 2009 | August 2010 | January 2011 (5) | 1.5 (August 2009) | 3.5 (August 2016) | 0.14 | |
| F | February 2010 | March 2011 | April 2012 (13) | 3.5 (January 2010)[ | 6.0 (April 2016) | 0.45 | |
| J | July 2009 | July 2010 | August 2015 (N/A) | 3.0 (July 2009) | 1.0 (May 2016) | 0 |
CDP: clinical development program; EDSS: Expanded Disability Status Scale; ARR: annualized relapse rate; SC IFNB-1a: subcutaneous interferon beta-1a.
Date when first symptoms were reported.
Baseline EDSS score prior to receiving alemtuzumab in the CARE-MS extension study (patient F previously received SC IFNB-1a in CAMMS223).