Renal response status to predict long-term renal survival in patients with lupus nephritis: results from the Toronto Lupus Cohort.

Journal: Lupus Science & Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To evaluate modified versions of the Belimumab International Study in Lupus Nephritis (BLISS-LN) belimumab study primary efficacy renal response (mPERR) and complete renal response (mCRR) criteria (excluding mandatory corticosteroid tapering) as predictors of real-world, long-term renal outcomes among patients with lupus nephritis (LN).

Methods: This retrospective, observational study (GSK Study 212866) used deidentified data between 1970 and 2015 from the University of Toronto Lupus Cohort from adults diagnosed with systemic lupus erythematosus and biopsy-proven Class III±V, IV±V or V LN. At 24 months postbiopsy, patients were retrospectively indexed as responders/non-responders based on mPERR (estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ≤20% below biopsy value/≥60 mL/min/1.73 m2 and urine protein:creatinine ratio (uPCR) ≤0.7 g/day) or mCRR (eGFR ≤10% below biopsy value/≥90 mL/min/1.73 m2 and uPCR ≤0.5 g/day) criteria. The association between index mPERR (primary outcome) or mCRR (secondary outcome) status and long-term (up to 25 years, until censoring or death) renal survival (no progression to end-stage kidney disease (eGFR <30 mL/min/1.73 m2, dialysis or transplant) or death) was assessed.

Results: Overall, 179 patients were included in the analysis (mPERR responders, n=128; non-mPERR responders, n=51). Most patients were female (87.2%); the mean (SD) age was 34.1 (11.3) years.Long-term renal survival was attained for 78.9% of mPERR responders and 60.8% of non-mPERR responders; achieving mPERR was associated with an increased likelihood of long-term renal survival versus not achieving mPERR (log-rank p=0.0119). Overall, 102 patients were mCRR responders, and 77 were non-mCRR responders. Long-term renal survival was attained for 80.4% of mCRR responders and 64.9% of non-mCRR responders; achieving mCRR was associated with an increased likelihood of long-term renal survival than not achieving mCRR (log-rank p=0.0259).

Conclusions: Achieving mPERR or mCRR was associated with improved long-term renal survival, highlighting that these statuses are suitable predictors of long-term renal outcomes in patients with LN.

Authors
Murray Urowitz, Mary Georgiou, Zahi Touma, Jiandong Su, Juan Diaz Martinez, Qinggong Fu, Roger Levy, Kerry Gairy, Anne Mackinnon, Nicole Anderson, Patricia Juliao