New and emerging treatments for lupus nephritis

Pietro A.A. Canetta MD, Gerald B. Appel MD
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Lupus nephritis continues to carry substantial morbidity and mortality, affecting patients mostly in the prime of their youth.<span>2</span>, <span>3</span> Even with aggressive regimens, treatment-refrac-tory lupus nephritis may occur in a significant proportion of patients,<span>4</span>, <span>5</span> and disease relapses are both common and associated with worse prognosis.<span>6-8</span> For these reasons, a large number of novel therapies are pres-ently in various stages of development and promise to provide further options for the treating physician. In this article, we sum-marize current therapeutic standards of care and review novel and emerging treatments for lupus nephritis.</p><p>While SLE may have a variety of presen-tations in the kidney, glomerulonephritis remains the most common and the most well studied.<span>9</span> The International Society of Nephrology/Renal Pathology Society (ISN/RPS) 2003 classification of lupus nephritis provides a standardized, repro-ducible classification of disease that has essentially replaced the older World Health Organization classification.<span>10</span> At present, the histologic pattern of disease as classified by ISN/RPS broadly determines the therapeutic approach, placed in the appro-priate context of an individual patient's clinical parameters.</p><p>In the setting of mild disease, repre-sented by ISN/RPS class I nephritis (nor-mal glomeruli by light microscopy with mesangial deposits on immunofluorescence or electron microscopy) and the majority of class II nephritis (pure mesangial hyper-cellularity by light microscopy with mesan-gial immune deposits), immunosuppressive treatment is not indicated. Most patients with these forms of disease will have good long-term renal outcomes. The cornerstone of therapy is control of blood pressure and suppression of proteinuria through block-ade of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) with either an angioten-sin-converting enzyme inhibitor (CEI) or angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB).</p><p>The rationale for this approach is based on extrapolation from human studies in other chronic proteinuric kidney diseases<span>11</span> as well as an abundance of animal studies.<span>12-14</span> Additional support has been provided by a recent report from the lupus in minorities: nature versus nurture (LUMINA) cohort.<span>15</span> In this cohort, 80 of 378 patients (21%) were CEI users. CEI use was associated with higher probability of renal involve-ment-free survival at 10 years (88.1% vs. 75.4% for non-users, <i>P</i> = 0.01), a delay in the development of renal involvement (haz-ard ratio [HR] 0.27; 95% CI 0.09, 0.78), and a decreased risk of disease activity (HR 0.56; 95% CI 0.34, 0.94).</p><p>Focal or diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis are classified respectively in the ISN/RPS schema as classes III and IV. They are each subclassified based on the presence of active lesions (A), chronic inactive or sclerosed lesions (C), or a com-bination of the two (A/C). These prolifera-tive forms of lupus nephritis, particularly with active lesions, confer a high risk for progressive loss of kidney function that mandates more aggressive immunosup-pressive treatment. It has become standard practice to separate treatment into two phases: induction, during which aggres-sive immunosuppression is used to achieve complete or partial disease remission over a period of months, and maintenance, during which lower doses of immunosuppression are used to keep the autoimmune process in check.</p><p>Many novel immunomodulatory agents are currently in various stages of development or study for the treatment of lupus nephritis. At present, 20 studies are registered at on the government's clinical trials website (www.clinicaltrials.gov) that are actively recruiting lupus nephritis patients. In general, the novel agents promise a more specific target of action with the hope of limiting the toxicities seen with current therapy.</p><p>The treatment of lupus nephritis has become increasingly sophisticated since the turn of the millennium, with an increase in high-quality clinical trials and a wider arsenal of therapeutic agents from which the clinician may choose. However, cur-rent regimens leave a substantial propor-tion of patients with uncontrolled or only partially controlled disease, and safety and toxicity profiles still leave much to be desired. 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Abstract

The last decade has witnessed con-siderable progress in the thera-peutic approach to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and particu-larly its renal manifestations. Advances in understanding the immunological basis of SLE, the development of increasingly specific and better tolerated pharmacologic agents, and an increased emphasis on rigor-ous clinical trial design have combined to produce validated treatment regimens with greater efficacy and less toxicity compared with the past.1

Despite these advances, there remains room for continued improvement. Lupus nephritis continues to carry substantial morbidity and mortality, affecting patients mostly in the prime of their youth.2, 3 Even with aggressive regimens, treatment-refrac-tory lupus nephritis may occur in a significant proportion of patients,4, 5 and disease relapses are both common and associated with worse prognosis.6-8 For these reasons, a large number of novel therapies are pres-ently in various stages of development and promise to provide further options for the treating physician. In this article, we sum-marize current therapeutic standards of care and review novel and emerging treatments for lupus nephritis.

While SLE may have a variety of presen-tations in the kidney, glomerulonephritis remains the most common and the most well studied.9 The International Society of Nephrology/Renal Pathology Society (ISN/RPS) 2003 classification of lupus nephritis provides a standardized, repro-ducible classification of disease that has essentially replaced the older World Health Organization classification.10 At present, the histologic pattern of disease as classified by ISN/RPS broadly determines the therapeutic approach, placed in the appro-priate context of an individual patient's clinical parameters.

In the setting of mild disease, repre-sented by ISN/RPS class I nephritis (nor-mal glomeruli by light microscopy with mesangial deposits on immunofluorescence or electron microscopy) and the majority of class II nephritis (pure mesangial hyper-cellularity by light microscopy with mesan-gial immune deposits), immunosuppressive treatment is not indicated. Most patients with these forms of disease will have good long-term renal outcomes. The cornerstone of therapy is control of blood pressure and suppression of proteinuria through block-ade of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) with either an angioten-sin-converting enzyme inhibitor (CEI) or angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB).

The rationale for this approach is based on extrapolation from human studies in other chronic proteinuric kidney diseases11 as well as an abundance of animal studies.12-14 Additional support has been provided by a recent report from the lupus in minorities: nature versus nurture (LUMINA) cohort.15 In this cohort, 80 of 378 patients (21%) were CEI users. CEI use was associated with higher probability of renal involve-ment-free survival at 10 years (88.1% vs. 75.4% for non-users, P = 0.01), a delay in the development of renal involvement (haz-ard ratio [HR] 0.27; 95% CI 0.09, 0.78), and a decreased risk of disease activity (HR 0.56; 95% CI 0.34, 0.94).

Focal or diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis are classified respectively in the ISN/RPS schema as classes III and IV. They are each subclassified based on the presence of active lesions (A), chronic inactive or sclerosed lesions (C), or a com-bination of the two (A/C). These prolifera-tive forms of lupus nephritis, particularly with active lesions, confer a high risk for progressive loss of kidney function that mandates more aggressive immunosup-pressive treatment. It has become standard practice to separate treatment into two phases: induction, during which aggres-sive immunosuppression is used to achieve complete or partial disease remission over a period of months, and maintenance, during which lower doses of immunosuppression are used to keep the autoimmune process in check.

Many novel immunomodulatory agents are currently in various stages of development or study for the treatment of lupus nephritis. At present, 20 studies are registered at on the government's clinical trials website (www.clinicaltrials.gov) that are actively recruiting lupus nephritis patients. In general, the novel agents promise a more specific target of action with the hope of limiting the toxicities seen with current therapy.

The treatment of lupus nephritis has become increasingly sophisticated since the turn of the millennium, with an increase in high-quality clinical trials and a wider arsenal of therapeutic agents from which the clinician may choose. However, cur-rent regimens leave a substantial propor-tion of patients with uncontrolled or only partially controlled disease, and safety and toxicity profiles still leave much to be desired. Active research along a number of different therapeutic avenues promises continued improvement and refinement of our treatment of lupus nephritis.

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新的和新兴的治疗狼疮肾炎
在过去的十年中,系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)的治疗方法取得了相当大的进展,特别是其肾脏表现。随着对SLE免疫学基础的深入了解,越来越特异性和耐受性更好的药物的发展,以及对严格临床试验设计的日益重视,这些因素结合在一起,产生了比过去更有效、毒性更小的有效治疗方案。尽管取得了这些进展,但仍有继续改进的余地。狼疮肾炎继续携带大量的发病率和死亡率,影响患者大多在他们的青年时期。2,3即使采用积极的治疗方案,难治性狼疮性肾炎也可能在很大比例的患者中发生,4,5疾病复发既常见又与较差的预后相关。由于这些原因,大量的新疗法目前处于不同的发展阶段,并有望为治疗医生提供更多的选择。在这篇文章中,我们总结了目前治疗标准的护理和回顾新的和新兴的治疗狼疮性肾炎。虽然SLE在肾脏中可能有多种表现,但肾小球肾炎仍然是最常见和研究最多的国际肾脏病学会/肾脏病理学会(ISN/RPS) 2003狼疮肾炎分类提供了一个标准化的、可重复的疾病分类,基本上取代了旧的世界卫生组织分类目前,由ISN/RPS分类的疾病的组织学模式大致决定了治疗方法,并将其置于个体患者临床参数的适当背景下。在病情轻微的情况下,如ISN/RPS I级肾炎(光镜下肾小球正常,免疫荧光或电子显微镜下肾小球系膜沉积)和大多数II级肾炎(光镜下纯系膜高细胞化,系膜免疫沉积),不需要免疫抑制治疗。大多数患有这些疾病的患者将有良好的长期肾脏预后。治疗的基础是通过血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂(CEI)或血管紧张素受体阻滞剂(ARB)阻断肾素-血管紧张素-醛固酮系统(RAAS)来控制血压和抑制蛋白尿。这种方法的基本原理是基于对其他慢性蛋白尿肾病的人类研究以及大量动物研究的推断。最近一份来自少数群体狼疮:先天与后天(LUMINA)队列的报告提供了额外的支持在该队列中,378例患者中有80例(21%)是CEI使用者。使用CEI与10年无肾受累生存率较高(88.1% vs.未使用的75.4%,P = 0.01)、肾受累发展延迟相关(危险比[HR] 0.27;95% CI 0.09, 0.78),疾病活动风险降低(HR 0.56;95% ci 0.34, 0.94)。局灶性或弥漫性增殖性狼疮性肾炎在ISN/RPS模式中分别被分类为III类和IV类。它们根据活动性病变(A)、慢性非活动性或硬化性病变(C)或两者的结合(A/C)进行亚分类。这些增生形式的狼疮性肾炎,特别是活动性病变,具有进行性肾功能丧失的高风险,需要更积极的免疫抑制治疗。将治疗分为两个阶段已成为标准做法:诱导阶段,在此期间使用积极的免疫抑制以在几个月内实现疾病的完全或部分缓解;维持阶段,在此期间使用较低剂量的免疫抑制来控制自身免疫过程。许多新的免疫调节剂目前正处于不同的开发或研究阶段,用于治疗狼疮性肾炎。目前,在政府临床试验网站(www.clinicaltrials.gov)上注册的20个研究项目正在积极招募狼疮肾炎患者。一般来说,新型药物承诺更具体的行动目标,希望限制目前治疗中看到的毒性。自世纪之交以来,狼疮性肾炎的治疗变得越来越复杂,高质量的临床试验越来越多,临床医生可以选择的治疗药物也越来越多。然而,目前的治疗方案使相当一部分患者的疾病无法控制或仅部分得到控制,而且安全性和毒性情况仍有待改进。积极的研究沿着一些不同的治疗途径承诺继续改善和完善我们的狼疮肾炎的治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Dialysis & Transplantation
Dialysis & Transplantation 医学-工程:生物医学
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