| Literature DB >> 31014270 |
Hayley Bennett1, Phil McEwan1,2, Karina Hamilton1, Karl O'Reilly3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The short-term efficacy of tolvaptan in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) has been demonstrated across several phase 3 trials, while the ADPKD Outcomes Model (ADPKD-OM) represents a validated approach to predict natural disease progression over a lifetime horizon. This study describes the implementation of a tolvaptan treatment effect within the ADPKD-OM and explores the potential long-term benefits of tolvaptan therapy in ADPKD.Entities:
Keywords: Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease; Disease modelling; End-stage renal disease; Renal function decline; Tolvaptan
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31014270 PMCID: PMC6480528 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-019-1290-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Fig. 1Flow diagram of health states modelled in the ADPKD Outcomes Model. Following the initiation RRT (grey box), patients were modelled across conservative care, dialysis and transplant health states
Patient characteristics of the TEMPO 3:4, TEMPO 4:4 and REPRISE trial populations for use in model validation exercises and illustrative analyses
| Trial population | Cohort size (n) | Baseline characteristics, mean (SE)a | Source | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | Female (%) | eGFR (mL/min/1. 73m2) | TKV (mL) | |||
| Model application | ||||||
| TEMPO 3:4 overall cohort | 1445 | 38.7 | 48.4 | 81.61 | 1692.30 | [ |
| TEMPO 3:4 subgroups: | ||||||
| - CKD 1 | 502 | 34.3 | 52.7 | 105.69 | 1353.76 | [ |
| - CKD 2 | 689 | 40.3 | 49.5 | 75.00 | 1712.00 | [ |
| - CKD 3 | 248 | 42.0 | 36.7 | 51.34 | 2323.18 | [ |
| - CKD 1–3; Mayo subclasses 1C-1E | 1285 | 38.0 | 46.1 | 81.29 | 1760.40 | [ |
| Model validation | ||||||
| TEMPO 4:4 early-treated cohortb | 557 | 38.95 (0.29)c | 45.60 (2.11) | 81.35 (0.68)d | 1706.00 (37.35) | [ |
| REPRISE overall cohort | 1370 | 47.50 (0.22) | 50.40 (0.01) | 41.00 (0.30) | 2026.30 (37.88) | [ |
CKD chronic kidney disease, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, SE standard error, TKV total kidney volume
aSE derived from standard deviations and patient numbers reported in the original trial publications
bReported values reflect the characteristics of the TEMPO 4:4 early-treated cohort at TEMPO 3:4 baseline
cAge of patients at TEMPO 3:4 baseline was assumed to be 3.25 years less than the reported baseline age in TEMPO 4:4, based on the duration of TEMPO 3:4 (3 years) and the off-treatment period between TEMPO 3:4 and TEMPO 4.4 (approximately 3 months)
dBaseline eGFR was not reported in TEMPO 4:4; thus, it was assumed that baseline eGFR among the matched population was equal to the full TEMPO 3:4 population [8]
Model inputs modified in sensitivity and scenario analyses
| Modified variables | Modified inputs | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity analysis | |||
| Discontinuation of treatmenta,b | 15.30, 6.51, 2.89 and 0.50% in years 1, 2, 3 and 4+, respectively | ||
| Replication of ADPKD progression observed in TEMPO 3:4a | Percentage change in TKV from baseline with placebo: 5.05, 11.49 and 18.85% in years 1, 2 and 3, respectively | ||
| Treatment effect based on CKD-Epi equationa | 26.4% reduction in eGFR decline | ||
| Scenario analysis | |||
| Treatment effect by CKD stage at tolvaptan initiationa | CKD 1 | 14.7% reduction in eGFR decline | |
| CKD 2 | 31.0% reduction in eGFR decline | ||
| CKD 3 | 40.5% reduction in eGFR decline | ||
| Treatment effect based on CKD-Epi equation | CKD stage at tolvaptan initiationc | CKD 1 | 15.5% reduction in eGFR decline |
| CKD 2 | 29.1% reduction in eGFR decline | ||
| CKD 3 | 31.0% reduction in eGFR decline | ||
| Mayo imaging classification at tolvaptan initiationd | 1C-1E | 28.2% reduction in eGFR decline | |
CKD Chronic kidney disease, CKD-Epi Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, TKV total kidney volume
aObserved in TEMPO 3:4 [8, 34]
bRate extrapolated after year 3
cTreatment effects reported for CKD 1 to CKD 3 subgroups in TEMPO 3:4 [10]; eGFR was estimated using the CKD-Epi equation [14]
dTreatment effect (eGFR slope − 2.82 mL/min/1. 73 m2 for tolvaptan versus − 3.93 mL/min/1. 73 m2 in placebo) reported for Mayo subclass 1C-E patients in TEMPO 3:4 [35]; eGFR was estimated using the CKD-Epi equation [14]
Fig. 2Validation of tolvaptan treatment effect applied in the ADPKD Outcomes Model. a Least squares mean eGFR change as observed in the early-treated cohort of TEMPO 4:4, assuming an average washout period of 3 months between TEMPO 3:4 and TEMPO 4:4 (unfilled triangles), compared against ADPKD-OM predictions (black filled squares joined by line). b Effect of tolvaptan on one-year eGFR change, as observed in REPRISE (grey filled bars) and predicted by the ADPKD-OM (unfilled bars). c Annualised eGFR slopes for tolvaptan and placebo arms, as observed in REPRISE (grey filled bars) and predicted by the ADPKD-OM (unfilled bars). Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals; eGFR was estimated using the CKD-Epi equation
Fig. 3Predicted trajectory of CKD progression in modelled ADPKD patients treated with tolvaptan (black filled points), compared to natural history (white filled points). Labelled points indicate mean values; shaded regions indicate 95% confidence intervals; eGFR was estimated using the reciprocal of serum creatinine level
Fig. 4Kaplan-Meier plot of predicted survival to ESRD in modelled ADPKD patients treated with tolvaptan (solid line), compared to natural history (dashed line)
Fig. 5Influence of modelled scenarios on predicted time to ESRD, relative to the base case analysis in which the treatment effect measured by reciprocal of serum creatinine was applied to the overall TEMPO 3:4 population, without discontinuation. White bars indicate model predictions under natural history; grey bars indicate the incremental effect of tolvaptan on predicted time to ESRD