Some of the best clinical trials of patients with antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody–associated vasculitis (AAV) that were presented at the 21st International Vasculitis Workshop in Barcelona, Spain, included studies addressing relapse after stopping steroids, preventing relapse with abatacept, improving kidney function with plasma exchange, and vaccinating rituximab-treated patients.
Stopping Steroids After Remission in GPA
In the randomized, open-label TAPIR (The Assessment of Prednisone In Remission Trial) study of 159 adults with GPA in remission who had tapered to a prednisone dose of 5 mg/day, those who remained at that dosage had a significantly lower rate of relapse after 6 months than those who tapered to 0 mg/day (4.2% vs 15.5%; P = .227), according to results reported at the meeting.
However, use of a higher dose of prednisone for disease relapse by 6 months was similar for patients who used rituximab at baseline (8.8% with 0 mg/day vs 6.1% with 5 mg/day; P = .667), and the difference in this primary outcome was more pronounced among patients who did not take rituximab at baseline (20.0% with 0 mg/day vs 2.6% with 5 mg/day; P = .023).
A higher percentage of patients taking prednisone 0 mg/day had disease relapses that were considered minor (14.1% and 4.2%; P = .0391). Major relapses occurred in none of the patients taking 5 mg/day and in 1.4% receiving 0 mg/day. About 90% of patients in either treatment arm completed the trial.
The study, funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskelatal and Skin Diseases and the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, was unique in that half of patients randomized in the study were enrolled at community clinics and half were enrolled at Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium clinical centers.
Abatacept Falls Short for Preventing Relapse in GPA
Adding abatacept to glucocorticoids failed to reduce risk of relapse, worsening disease, or failure to reach remission in adults with relapsing, nonsevere GPA, based on data from a randomized trial of 65 individuals.
In the 20-site, randomized, double-blind ABROGATE (Abatacept for the Treatment of Relapsing, Non-Severe, Granulomatosis With Polyangiitis) study, 34 patients received 125 mg subcutaneous abatacept once a week or a placebo in addition to 30 mg/day of prednisone that was tapered and discontinued after 12 weeks. Patients who were receiving methotrexate, azathioprine, mycophenolate, or leflunomide at baseline continued the medication at a stable dose.
The primary outcome of disease worsening or relapse occurred in 62% of the abatacept group and 68% of the placebo group, and no significant difference in treatment failure rate appeared between the groups. In addition, key secondary endpoints of time to full remission, duration of glucocorticoid-free remission, relapse severity, prevention of damage, and patient-reported quality of life outcomes were not significantly different between the groups.
A total of 112 adverse events occurred, with similar type and severity between the groups, including incidence of infections.
The findings were limited by the relatively small sample size, but the results suggest a need for further research to determine mechanisms of disease and explore additional novel treatments for this rare patient population, the researchers wrote in their abstract.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and Bristol-Myers Squibb.