| Literature DB >> 33912740 |
Philipp Gauckler1, Jae Il Shin2,3,4, Federico Alberici5,6, Vincent Audard7, Annette Bruchfeld8,9, Martin Busch10, Chee Kay Cheung11,12, Matija Crnogorac13, Elisa Delbarba5, Kathrin Eller14, Stanislas Faguer15,16, Kresimir Galesic13, Siân Griffin17, Martijn W F van den Hoogen18, Zdenka Hrušková19, Anushya Jeyabalan20, Alexandre Karras21, Catherine King22, Harbir Singh Kohli23, Gert Mayer1, Rutger Maas24, Masahiro Muto25, Sergey Moiseev26, Balazs Odler14, Ruth J Pepper27, Luis F Quintana28, Jai Radhakrishnan20, Raja Ramachandran23, Alan D Salama27, Ulf Schönermarck29, Mårten Segelmark30, Lee Smith31, Vladimír Tesař19, Jack Wetzels24, Lisa Willcocks32, Martin Windpessl33,34, Ladan Zand35, Reza Zonozi36, Andreas Kronbichler1.
Abstract
Membranous nephropathy (MN) is the most common cause of primary nephrotic syndrome among adults. The identification of phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R) as target antigen in most patients changed the management of MN dramatically, and provided a rationale for B-cell depleting agents such as rituximab. The efficacy of rituximab in inducing remission has been investigated in several studies, including 3 randomized controlled trials, in which complete and partial remission of proteinuria was achieved in approximately two-thirds of treated patients. Due to its favorable safety profile, rituximab is now considered a first-line treatment option for MN, especially in patients at moderate and high risk of deterioration in kidney function. However, questions remain about how to best use rituximab, including the optimal dosing regimen, a potential need for maintenance therapy, and assessment of long-term safety and efficacy outcomes. In this review, we provide an overview of the current literature and discuss both strengths and limitations of "the new standard."Entities:
Keywords: B cells; membranous nephropathy; nephrotic syndrome; rituximab
Year: 2021 PMID: 33912740 PMCID: PMC8071613 DOI: 10.1016/j.ekir.2020.12.035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int Rep ISSN: 2468-0249
Criteria for risk assessment of progressive loss of kidney function
| Low risk | Moderate risk | High risk | Very high risk | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| eGFR | Normal | Normal | <60 ml/min per 1.73 m2 | Rapid deterioration |
| Proteinuria | <3.5 g/d and/or serum albumin >30 g/l | >4 g/d and no decrease >50% after 6 mo of supportive therapy | >8 g/d for >6 months | Life-threatening nephrotic syndrome |
| PLA2R Ab | <50 RU/ml | >150 RU/ml | ||
| Low molecular weight proteinuria | Mild | High | High (in 2 urine samples collected with interval of 6–12 mo) | |
| Urinary IgG | <250 mg/d | >250 mg/d | ||
| Selectivity index | <0.15 | >0.20 |
eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; PLA2R Ab, M-type phospholipase A2 receptor antibody.
Modified according to provisional Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes guidelines (public review draft).
Serial measurement every 3 to 6 months should be performed, as changes of PLA2R Ab levels precede signs. Dynamics of PLA2R Ab levels therefore may be of additional value for risk estimation.
Ratio of clearance of high molecular weight molecules (IgG, IgM, α2-macroglobulin) to that of albumin.
Strengths and limitations of rituximab in membranous nephropathy
| Pro | Con | |
|---|---|---|
| Efficacy | Remission in two-thirds of treated patients | Possibly lower CR rates compared with a cyclical therapy |
| Low relapse rates | ||
| Application | Simple dosing | Frequent IRR |
| Long intervals (≥6 mo) and in PLA2R Ab-positive patients serologic monitoring option for maintenance treatment | Delicate scheduling due to persistent B-cell depletion (e.g., during COVID-19 pandemic) | |
| Side effects | Overall beneficial safety profile; low rates of SAE | No long-term experience, late-onset neutropenia |
| Long-term sequelae | No increased malignancy risk, no increase in cardiovascular mortality | Treatment-associated long-lasting hypogammaglobulinemia |
COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; CR, complete remission; IRR; infusion-related reactions; PLA2R Ab, M-type phospholipase A2 receptor antibody; SAE, severe adverse events.
Overview of prospective rituximab trials in membranous nephropathy
| First author, (study) | Year | Design | RTX / Immunosuppression | Mean FU, mo | Complete + partial remission rates | Complete remission rates | % SAE [% infections] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fervenza | 2008 | Uncontrolled, open-label pilot trial | 15 | RTX (1 g day 1 & 15; + 2nd course at 6 mo if proteinuric + B-cell recovery) | 12 | No SAE | ||
| Segarra | 2009 | Uncontrolled | 13 | RTX (4 wkly 375 mg/m2) in CNI-dependent patients ± prior IS | 30 | No AE | ||
| Fervenza | 2010 | Uncontrolled | 20 | RTX (4 wkly 375 mg/m2 + second course at 6 mo regardless of response) | 24 | No SAE | ||
| Busch | 2013 | Uncontrolled | 14 | RTX (4 monthly 375 mg/m2) + prior IS | 36 (median; range 1–6 y) | 7% [7%, central venous catheter infection] | ||
| Ruggenenti | 2015 | Uncontrolled | 132 | RTX (4 wkly 375 mg/m2) ± prior IS ± RTX reapplication | 30.8 (median, 6–145.4) | Not reported. | ||
| Roccatello | 2016 | Uncontrolled | 17 | RTX (4 wkly 375 mg/m2) ± RTX reapplication | 36.3 (range 24–48) | Not reported. | ||
| Fiorentino | 2016 | Uncontrolled | 38 | RTX (4 wkly ( | 15 (median, IQR 7.7–30.2) | No SAE | ||
| Waldman | 2016 | Phase 2 pilot study (single arm) | 13 | RTX (1 g day 1 & 15) ± reapplication + CSA (6m + 18m tapering) | 41 (range 24–56) | 30% (5 episodes of late-onset neutropenia in 3 patients) | ||
| Moroni | 2017 | Uncontrolled, observational | 34 | Low-dose RTX (single dose ( | 23.9 (+/- 18.6) | |||
| Dahan (GEMRITUX) | 2017 | RCT | 37 (vs. 38) | NIAT ± RTX (2 wkly 375 mg/m2) | 17 (median) | |||
| Fervenza (MENTOR) | 2019 | RCT | 65 (vs. 65) | RTX (1 g day 1 & 15) ± RTX reapplication vs. CSA | 24 | |||
| Fernández-Juárez (STARMEN) | 2020 | RCT | 43 (vs. 43) | Oral TAC for 6 mo (+ 3-mo tapering) + RTX (1 g single-dose) at month 6 vs. MP (months 1, 3, 5) and CYC (months 2, 4, 6) | 24 |
AE, adverse event; CI, confidence interval; CNI, calcineurin inhibitors; CSA, cyclosporine A; CYC, cyclophosphamide; FU, follow-up; IQR, interquartile range; IRR, infusion-related reaction; IS, immunosuppression; MP, methylprednisolone; NIAT, nonimmunosuppressive antiproteinuric treatment; OR, odds ratio; PP percentage points; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RTX, rituximab; SAE, serious adverse events; TAC, tacrolimus.
Varying definitions for remission in the listed studies (e.g., proteinuria cutoff for partial remission <3 g [e.g., Fervenza et al.] or 3.5 g [e.g., Refs.,,,,] per g creatinine or 24 h) limit direct comparability.
All patients were in remission before receiving RTX; proteinuria decreased from 2.5 ± 0.76 at baseline to 0.85 ± 0.17 at 6 months (P = 0.0003); CNI and other IS could be withdrawn in all patients; glomerular filtration rate increased significantly (from 95.4 ± 11 to 110 ± 13 at month 6; mean percent increase of 15.3%); 3 of 13 patients suffered relapse and received a second course of RTX (titrated to B-cell depletion); proteinuria cutoffs for remission were not defined in this study.
Prior prospective studies from the center Bergamo (Italy),,, likely report overlapping cases and thus are not listed separately in the table.
Figure 1Overview of different dosing regimens used in clinical trials (blue boxes) and a potential algorithm for subsequent dosing as recommended by current Kidney Disease : Improving Global Outcomes guidelines (green boxes).
CYC, cyclophosphamide; PLA2R Ab, M-type phospholipase A2 receptor antibody; PR, partial remission.
∗ In « high-dose regimens » using a second course of the initial rituximab dosing after 6 months, KDIGO recommendations for subsequent dosing in the first 6 months are not applicable (gray arrows). Nonetheless, subsequent dosing may be guided similarly thereafter.