Rituximab for the treatment of Churg-Strauss syndrome with renal involvement

Rodrigo Cartin-Ceba, Karina A Keogh, Ulrich Specks, Sanjeev Sethi, Fernando C Fervenza, Rodrigo Cartin-Ceba, Karina A Keogh, Ulrich Specks, Sanjeev Sethi, Fernando C Fervenza

Abstract

Introduction: Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS) is a small vessel systemic vasculitis associated with asthma and eosinophilia that causes glomerulonephritis (GN) in ∼25% of patients. Rituximab (RTX) is a chimeric anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody that depletes B cells and is effective in numerous autoimmune diseases including antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis. We aim to evaluate the safety and efficacy of RTX in inducing remission of renal disease activity in patients with CSS.

Methods: We conducted a single-center, open-label pilot study using RTX (375 mg/m(2)/week × 4) for induction of remission in CSS patients with renal involvement [defined as having >25% dysmorphic red cells, red blood cell casts or pauci-immune GN on biopsy]. Written informed consent was obtained from all individuals. Patients were eligible if they were untreated, had failed glucocorticoid therapy or had failed glucocorticoid dose reductions because of disease relapses. The primary outcome was remission of renal disease activity defined as stability or improvement of creatinine clearance, absence of active urinary sediment and reduction of the glucocorticoid dose to <50% of the average dose received over 3 months before enrollment or <10 mg/day (whichever is smaller) at 6 months. Patients were followed up for 1 year.

Results: Only three patients (two females; ages 54, 55 and 65) were enrolled. All patients had positive myeloperoxidase-ANCA and renal involvement. Two patients had biopsy-proven pauci-immune crescentic GN. All achieved the primary end point of renal remission within the first 3 months and remained in renal remission during the year following RTX treatment. One patient experienced a nonrenal relapse (eye and joint involvement) at 6 months coinciding with the reconstitution of CD19+ cells and eosinophilia. He was retreated with RTX and achieved remission within 6 weeks. No major adverse effects were recorded.

Conclusions: In this pilot study, RTX was safe and successful in controlling renal disease activity in three patients with CSS. This agent deserves further study in CSS.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Panels A and B describe the inflammatory markers response (sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein) with marked improvement after initiation of RTX in all the subjects. Panels C and D describe the eosinophilia response and the levels of MPO, respectively, note that with the exemption of Patient # 1, the response was sustained over the 48 weeks of the study. Prednisone therapy and BVAS scores are described in Panels E and F, respectively; prednisone was successfully discontinued in two individuals and Patient # 1 was able to lower the dosage to

Source: PubMed

3
S'abonner