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Patient benefits justify price of new lupus nephritis drugs


 

Black patients underrepresented in trials

The ICER authors voiced concern over the fact that individuals most at risk for SLE – mostly Black patients, but also patients of other racial groups – were underrepresented in clinical trials that evaluated both agents.

“We cannot stress enough that the results are highly uncertain due to the small numbers of Black patients in the available clinical trials and the lack of data on differences among subgroups in long-term outcomes,” they stated.

This is not an academic issue, Dr. Phillips pointed out. Responses to both MMF and cyclophosphamide differ among persons of different races, “so it’s not unreasonable to consider that there could be racial differences in treatment responses to both drugs, and these definitely need to be investigated.”

This is not an academic issue, Dr. Phillips said, because there are racial disparities in how patients respond to both MMF and cyclophosphamide – “so it’s not unreasonable to consider that there could be racial differences in treatment responses to both drugs, and these definitely need to be investigated.”

The ICER authors appear to agree. They urged the manufacturers of the two new agents to expand their research to include adequate representation of lupus nephritis patients from Black and other non-White communities.

However, it is somewhat reassuring that the pivotal voclosporin trial enrolled about 30% of Hispanic patients and that about 17% of participants in the BLISS-LN trial were also Hispanic, Dr. Rovin pointed out.

This is important because Hispanic patients can have very aggressive disease, as can Black patients, he noted. There is some evidence to suggest both drugs are effective in aggressive disease.

The ICER also pointed out that the length of time that both drugs can be used prior to tapering of treatment, after which patients receive standard maintenance therapy alone, has yet to be established.

This is important, Dr. Rovin and Dr. Phillips agreed, because calcineurin inhibitors are known to be nephrotoxic, and both drugs are immunosuppressive. At least with respect to voclosporin, there is some cause of concern regarding prolonged use of the drug for patients with kidney disease.

“We don’t want patients to be on an immunosuppressive drug forever if they don’t need to be,” Dr. Rovin emphasized.

“But we are seeing really long-term remission in the setting of other inflammatory diseases, like vasculitis with rituximab. So there is hope that we can achieve the same thing in lupus. If we use drugs that target T cells in the immune system, like voclosporin, or B cells, like belimumab, maybe we can ‘reset’ the immune system and get rid of potentially autoreactive cells that could allow long-lasting disease remission, which is an unanswered question but an intriguing possibility,” he concluded.

Dr. Rovin has served as a consultant for GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Phillips disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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