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Abstract

Summary Background

IgA nephropathy is thought to be associated with mucosal immune system dysfunction, which manifests as renal IgA deposition that leads to impairment and end-stage renal disease in 20–40% of patients within 10–20 years. In this trial (NEFIGAN) we aimed to assess safety and efficacy of a novel targeted-release formulation of budesonide (TRF-budesonide), designed to deliver the drug to the distal ileum in patients with IgA nephropathy.

Methods

We did a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2b trial, comprised of 6-month run-in, 9-month treatment, and 3-month follow-up phases at 62 nephrology clinics across ten European countries. We recruited patients aged at least 18 years with biopsy-confirmed primary IgA nephropathy and persistent proteinuria despite optimised renin-angiotensin system (RAS) blockade. We randomly allocated patients with a computer algorithm, with a fixed block size of three, in a 1:1:1 ratio to 16 mg/day TRF-budesonide, 8 mg/day TRF-budesonide, or placebo, stratified by baseline urine protein creatinine ratio (UPCR). Patients self-administered masked capsules, once daily, 1 h before breakfast during the treatment phase. All patients continued optimised RAS blockade treatment throughout the trial. Our primary outcome was mean change from baseline in UPCR for the 9-month treatment phase, which was assessed in the full analysis set, defined as all randomised patients who took at least one dose of trial medication and had at least one post-dose efficacy measurement. Safety was assessed in all patients who received the intervention. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01738035.

Findings

Between Dec 11, 2012, and June 25, 2015, 150 randomised patients were treated (safety set) and 149 patients were eligible for the full analysis set. Overall, at 9 months TRF-budesonide (16 mg/day plus 8 mg/day) was associated with a 24·4% (SEM 7·7%) decrease from baseline in mean UPCR (change in UPCR vs placebo 0·74; 95% CI 0·59–0·94; p=0·0066). At 9 months, mean UPCR had decreased by 27·3% in 48 patients who received 16 mg/day (0·71; 0·53–0·94; p=0·0092) and 21·5% in the 51 patients who received 8 mg/day (0·76; 0·58–1·01; p=0·0290); 50 patients who received placebo had an increase in mean UPCR of 2·7%. The effect was sustained throughout followup. Incidence of adverse events was similar in all groups (43 [88%] of 49 in the TRF-budesonide 16 mg/day group, 48 [94%] of 51 in the TRF-budesonide 8 mg/day, and 42 [84%] of 50 controls). Two of 13 serious adverse events were possibly associated with TRF-budesonide—deep vein thrombosis (16 mg/day) and unexplained deterioration in renal function in follow-up (patients were tapered from 16 mg/day to 8 mg/day over 2 weeks and follow-up was assessed 4 weeks later).

Interpretation

TRF-budesonide 16 mg/day, added to optimised RAS blockade, reduced proteinuria in patients with IgA nephropathy. This effect is indicative of a reduced risk of future progression to end-stage renal disease. TRF-budesonide could become the first specific treatment for IgA nephropathy targeting intestinal mucosal immunity upstream of disease manifestation.

Funding

Pharmalink AB.

Details

Title
Targeted-release budesonide versus placebo in patients with IgA nephropathy (NEFIGAN): a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled phase 2b trial
Author
Fellström, Bengt C 1 ; Barratt, Jonathan 2 ; Cook, Heather 3 ; Coppo, Rosanna 4 ; Feehally, John 2 ; de Fijter, Johan W 5 ; Floege, Jürgen 6 ; Hetzel, Gerd 7 ; Jardine, Alan G 8 ; Locatelli, Francesco 9 ; Maes, Bart D 10 ; Mercer, Alex 11 ; Ortiz, Fernanda 12 ; Praga, Manuel 13 ; Sørensen, Søren S 14 ; Tesar, Vladimir 15 ; Lucia Del Vecchio 9 

 Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden 
 University of Leicester, Leicester, UK 
 PharmaLogic Consulting AB, Stockholm, Sweden 
 Fondazione Ricerca Molinette, Regina Margherita Hospital, Turin, Italy 
 Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands 
 RWTH University Aachen, Germany 
 HeinrichHeine-University, DaVita Renal Center, Düsseldorf, Germany 
 University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK 
 Ospedale A Manzoni, Lecco, Italy 
10  AZ Delta, Roeselare, Belgium 
11  Pharmalink AB, Stockholm, Sweden 
12  Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland 
13  Complutense University, Investigation Institute Hospital 12 de Octubre, Madrid, Spain 
14  Rigshospitalet-Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark 
15  Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic 
Pages
2117-2127
Section
Articles
Publication year
2017
Publication date
May 27, 2017
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
01406736
e-ISSN
1474547X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2317905833
Copyright
©2017. Elsevier Ltd