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MELBOURNE – A reduction in urinary protein creatinine ratio and normalization of inflammatory biomarkers early in treatment of lupus nephritis may predict response rates at 24 and 48 weeks, according to data from the AURION study presented at an international congress on systemic lupus erythematosus.

Robert Huizinga
Presenter Robert B. Huizinga, vice president of clinical affairs for Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, said the data showed there was unlikely to be one biomarker with both high sensitivity and high specificity.

“Certainly if you use C3, C4, and urinary protein creatinine ratio, you can say to the patient after week 8, ‘I don’t think this is going to work for you. You need to come off this therapy and move to something else,’ ” he said in an interview.

Mr. Huizinga said the company, which recently released 48-week data from the larger AURA-LV study of the same regimen in 265 patients, was now building this week-8 analysis into its studies, and hoped it would also provide an early predictive marker for other clinical trials.

Commenting on the findings, Brad Rovin, MD, professor of nephrology and pathology at Ohio State University, Columbus, and also an adviser to Aurinia, said this predictive ability would be extremely useful for clinicians.

“If a patient isn’t responding appropriately and you can really know that with some degree of certainty at 8 weeks, then instead of waiting 6 months to change therapy, maybe you should change earlier,” Dr. Rovin said in an interview.

This was particularly important in lupus nephritis, as the longer inflammation is allowed to continue, the greater the likelihood that it might tip over into fibrosis, he noted.

The study was funded by Aurinia.

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MELBOURNE – A reduction in urinary protein creatinine ratio and normalization of inflammatory biomarkers early in treatment of lupus nephritis may predict response rates at 24 and 48 weeks, according to data from the AURION study presented at an international congress on systemic lupus erythematosus.

Robert Huizinga
Presenter Robert B. Huizinga, vice president of clinical affairs for Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, said the data showed there was unlikely to be one biomarker with both high sensitivity and high specificity.

“Certainly if you use C3, C4, and urinary protein creatinine ratio, you can say to the patient after week 8, ‘I don’t think this is going to work for you. You need to come off this therapy and move to something else,’ ” he said in an interview.

Mr. Huizinga said the company, which recently released 48-week data from the larger AURA-LV study of the same regimen in 265 patients, was now building this week-8 analysis into its studies, and hoped it would also provide an early predictive marker for other clinical trials.

Commenting on the findings, Brad Rovin, MD, professor of nephrology and pathology at Ohio State University, Columbus, and also an adviser to Aurinia, said this predictive ability would be extremely useful for clinicians.

“If a patient isn’t responding appropriately and you can really know that with some degree of certainty at 8 weeks, then instead of waiting 6 months to change therapy, maybe you should change earlier,” Dr. Rovin said in an interview.

This was particularly important in lupus nephritis, as the longer inflammation is allowed to continue, the greater the likelihood that it might tip over into fibrosis, he noted.

The study was funded by Aurinia.

 

MELBOURNE – A reduction in urinary protein creatinine ratio and normalization of inflammatory biomarkers early in treatment of lupus nephritis may predict response rates at 24 and 48 weeks, according to data from the AURION study presented at an international congress on systemic lupus erythematosus.

Robert Huizinga
Presenter Robert B. Huizinga, vice president of clinical affairs for Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, said the data showed there was unlikely to be one biomarker with both high sensitivity and high specificity.

“Certainly if you use C3, C4, and urinary protein creatinine ratio, you can say to the patient after week 8, ‘I don’t think this is going to work for you. You need to come off this therapy and move to something else,’ ” he said in an interview.

Mr. Huizinga said the company, which recently released 48-week data from the larger AURA-LV study of the same regimen in 265 patients, was now building this week-8 analysis into its studies, and hoped it would also provide an early predictive marker for other clinical trials.

Commenting on the findings, Brad Rovin, MD, professor of nephrology and pathology at Ohio State University, Columbus, and also an adviser to Aurinia, said this predictive ability would be extremely useful for clinicians.

“If a patient isn’t responding appropriately and you can really know that with some degree of certainty at 8 weeks, then instead of waiting 6 months to change therapy, maybe you should change earlier,” Dr. Rovin said in an interview.

This was particularly important in lupus nephritis, as the longer inflammation is allowed to continue, the greater the likelihood that it might tip over into fibrosis, he noted.

The study was funded by Aurinia.

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Key clinical point: Early reduction in urinary protein creatinine ratio and normalization of inflammatory biomarkers may predict 24- and 48-week lupus nephritis treatment response rates.

Major finding: A 25% reduction in urine protein creatinine ratio, and normalization of C3 or C4 levels at 8 weeks may be predictive of complete remission at 48 weeks.

Data source: The single-center exploratory AURION study of 10 patients with active lupus nephritis.

Disclosures: Mr. Huizinga is vice president of clinical affairs for Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, which funded the study.