Back to Search Start Over

An international, multi-center study evaluated rituximab therapy in childhood steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome

Authors :
Chan, Eugene Yu-hin
Sinha, Aditi
Yu, Ellen L.M.
Akhtar, Naureen
Angeletti, Andrea
Bagga, Arvind
Banerjee, Sushmita
Boyer, Olivia
Chan, Chang-Yien
Francis, Anna
Ghiggeri, Gian Marco
Hamada, Riku
Hari, Pankaj
Hooman, Nakysa
Hopf, Luke Sydney
I, Mohamad Ikram
Ijaz, Iftikhar
Ivanov, Dmytro D.
Kalra, Suprita
Kang, Hee Gyung
Lucchetti, Laura
Lugani, Francesca
Ma, Alison Lap-tak
Morello, William
Camargo Muñiz, María Dolores
Pradhan, Subal Kumar
Prikhodina, Larisa
Raafat, Reem H.
Sinha, Rajiv
Teo, Sharon
Tomari, Kouki
Vivarelli, Marina
Webb, Hazel
Yap, Hui Kim
Yap, Desmond Yat-hin
Tullus, Kjell
Source :
Kidney International; 20240101, Issue: Preprints
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The efficacy and safety of rituximab in childhood steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) remains unclear. Therefore, we conducted a retrospective cohort study at 28 pediatric nephrology centers from 19 countries in Asia, Europe, North America and Oceania to evaluate this. Children with SRNS treated with rituximab were analyzed according to the duration of calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) treatment before rituximab [6 months or more (CNI-resistant) and under 6 months]. Primary outcome was complete/partial remission (CR/PR) as defined by IPNA/KDIGO guidelines. Secondary outcomes included kidney failure and adverse events. Two-hundred-forty-six children (mean age, 6.9 years; 136 boys; 57% focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, FSGS) were followed a median of 32.4 months after rituximab. All patients were in non-remission before rituximab. (146 and 100 children received CNIs for 6 month or more or under 6 months before rituximab, respectively). In patients with CNI-resistant SRNS, the remission rates (CR/PR) at 3-, 6-, 12- and 24-months were 26% (95% confidence interval 19.3-34.1), 35.6% (28.0-44.0), 35.1% (27.2-43.8) and 39.1% (29.2-49.9), respectively. Twenty-five patients were in PR at 12-months, of which 22 had over 50% reduction in proteinuria from baseline. The remission rates among children treated with CNIs under 6 months before rituximab were 42% (32.3-52.3), 52% (41.8-62.0), 54% (44.3-64.5) and 60% (47.6-71.3) at 3-, 6-, 12-, and 24-months. Upon Kaplan-Meier analysis, non-remission and PR at 12-months after rituximab, compared to CR, were associated with significantly worse kidney survival. Adverse events occurred in 30.5% and most were mild. Thus, rituximab enhances remission in a subset of children with SRNS, is generally safe and CR following rituximab is associated with favorable kidney outcome.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00852538 and 15231755
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Kidney International
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs67659912
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2024.09.011