Immunosuppressive therapy in lupus nephritis: The Euro‐Lupus Nephritis Trial, a randomized trial of low‐dose versus high‐dose intravenous cyclophosphamide
Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc · UCLouvain · +19 more institutions
Abstract
Glomerulonephritis is a severe manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) that is usually treated with an extended course of intravenous (IV) cyclophosphamide (CYC). Given the side effects of this regimen, we evaluated the efficacy and the toxicity of a course of low-dose IV CYC prescribed as a remission-inducing treatment, followed by azathioprine (AZA) as a remission-maintaining treatment.
In this multicenter, prospective clinical trial (the Euro-Lupus Nephritis Trial [ELNT]), we randomly assigned 90 SLE patients with proliferative glomerulonephritis to a high-dose IV CYC regimen (6 monthly pulses and 2 quarterly pulses; doses increased according to the white blood cell count nadir) or a low-dose IV CYC regimen (6 fortnightly pulses at a fixed dose of 500 mg), each of which was followed by AZA. Intent-to-treat analyses were performed.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
22Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Lupus nephritis
- Cyclophosphamide
- Regimen
- Internal medicine
- Gastroenterology
- Azathioprine
- Randomized controlled trial
- Good health and well-being