Role of Anti-mouse PLA2R1 ELISA in Membranous Nephropathy

NCT ID: NCT02199145

Last Updated: 2023-11-18

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

52 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2015-07-17

Study Completion Date

2020-06-04

Brief Summary

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Membranous Nephropathy (MN) is an auto-immune kidney disease and a common cause of nephrotic syndrome. About 30% of MN patients progress to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) while 30% undergo spontaneous remission. The phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R1) is the major auto-antigen in idiopathic MN. Anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies are found during the active phase of MN. Predictors of disease progression include high titers of anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies and serum creatinine levels at presentation, as well as decline in renal function during the first six months of follow-up. Investigators identified new prognostic factors in a cohort of 41 idiopathic MN patients with nephrotic syndrome and anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies at the time of presentation. During a follow-up of at least 36 months, 21 patients had a persistent nephrotic syndrome (group A) and 20 showed partial or total remission (group R). We first measured the cross-reactivity of their sera at the time of presentation to human, rabbit and mouse recombinant PLA2R1 by western blot. All patients exhibited reactivity against human and rabbit PLA2R1, but only some of them did against mouse PLA2R1. These results suggest the presence of distinct epitopes that are differentially conserved among PLA2R1 orthologs.Investigators then set-up three parallel ELISAs using human, rabbit and mouse recombinant PLA2R1. All 41 MN patients showed activity in human and rabbit ELISAs at presentation but only 32 of them (78%) in mouse ELISA.They finally analyzed the association between anti-PLA2R1 titers at presentation in the different ELISAs and the subsequent clinical outcome. The mean anti-PLA2R1 activity was significantly different between group A and R in mouse ELISA but not in human and rabbit ELISA. Patients with anti-mouse PLA2R1 activity over 605 RU (relative unit)/ml showed a significantly lower survival without doubling of serum creatinine or ESKD , but patients in the highest tertile of anti-PLA2R1 activity in rabbit and human ELISA did not show a significant increased risk of renal failure progression. The results suggest that the specific detection of particular anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies using the novel anti-mouse PLA2R1 ELISA can identify MN patients at risk for ESKD. The aim is to confirm these result on a prospective cohort.

Detailed Description

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Membranous Nephropathy (MN) is an auto-immune kidney disease and a common cause of nephrotic syndrome. About 30% of MN patients progress to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) while 30% undergo spontaneous remission. The phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R1) is the major auto-antigen in idiopathic MN. Anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies are found during the active phase of MN \[2,3\]. Predictors of disease progression include high titers of anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies and serum creatinine levels at presentation, as well as decline in renal function during the first six months of follow-up. Investigators identified new prognostic factors in a cohort of 41 idiopathic MN patients with nephrotic syndrome and anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies at the time of presentation. During a follow-up of at least 36 months, 21 patients had a persistent nephrotic syndrome (group A) and 20 showed partial or total remission (group R). We first measured the cross-reactivity of their sera at the time of presentation to human, rabbit and mouse recombinant PLA2R1 by western blot. All patients exhibited reactivity against human and rabbit PLA2R1, but only some of them did against mouse PLA2R1. These results suggest the presence of distinct epitopes that are differentially conserved among PLA2R1 orthologs. We then set-up three parallel ELISAs using human, rabbit and mouse recombinant PLA2R1. All 41 MN patients showed activity in human and rabbit ELISAs at presentation but only 32 of them (78%) in mouse ELISA.

Investigators finally analyzed the association between anti-PLA2R1 titers at presentation in the different ELISAs and the subsequent clinical outcome. The mean anti-PLA2R1 activity was significantly different between group A and R in mouse ELISA in both univariate and multivariate analyses (p =0.006 and p =0.02, respectively) but not in human and rabbit ELISAs. An analysis of the mouse ELISA titers defines a threshold of 605 RU/ml above which 100% of patients had a poor prognosis, but no such threshold could be defined in rabbit and human ELISA. Patients with anti-mouse PLA2R1 activity over 605 RU/ml showed a significantly lower survival without doubling of serum creatinine or ESKD (p=0.002 using the log-rank test), but patients in the highest tertile of anti-PLA2R1 activity in rabbit and human ELISAs did not show a significant increased risk of renal failure progression. The results suggest that the specific detection of particular anti-PLA2R1 autoantibodies using the novel anti-mouse PLA2R1 ELISA can identify MN patients at risk for ESKD. The aim is to confirm these result on a prospective cohort.We propose to measure on a prospective cohort at the time of MN diagnosis if high titer of anti-mPLA2R1 Ab (anti-mouse phospholipase A2 receptor1 antibodies) is associated with nephrotic proteinuria (over 3.5 g/g) or increased of creatininemia over 30% at month 6, 12 and 18. An ancillary study will try to characterised the nephrogenic epitope conserved between human, rabbit and mouse.

Each patient with nephrotic syndrome should benefit of a kidney biopsy. For each patient we will conserved 2 dry tubes frozen at the time of biopsy. If we confirm the diagnosis of MN with anti-PLA2R1 Ab, we propose to the patient to be included in this study. He will have a visit every months for the first three months and every three months after, with collection of the following: blood pressure, weight, creatinine, albumin, blood electrolytes, proteinuria / creatinine in sample 1 assay Ac anti-PLA2R1 on 3 ELISA (human, rabbit and mouse) In case of persistent refractory nephrotic syndrome after 6 months, or the appearance of a 30% increase in serum creatinine, treatment with rituximab (2 × 1 g IV 15 days) will be proposed. Clinical and biological monitoring will be continued every 3 months for 18 months.

Conditions

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Membranous Nephropathy

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Blood and urine analysis

creatinine, albumin, blood electrolytes, proteinuria /creatinine in sample 1 assay Ac anti-PLA2R1 on 3 ELISA (human, rabbit and mouse)

Group Type OTHER

Blood and urine analysis

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

creatinine, albumin, blood electrolytes, proteinuria / creatinine in sample 1 assay Ac anti-PLA2R1 on 3 ELISA (human, rabbit and mouse)

Interventions

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Blood and urine analysis

creatinine, albumin, blood electrolytes, proteinuria / creatinine in sample 1 assay Ac anti-PLA2R1 on 3 ELISA (human, rabbit and mouse)

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Adult patients
* Patients with MN stade I-II confirmed by kidney biopsy
* Patients with MDRD\>30 ml/mn/1.73m2
* Patients with anti-PLA2R1 antibodies
* Effective Contraception for women of childbearing age

Exclusion Criteria

* Patients minors
* Patients refusing to participate in the study
* Patients with secondary MN (systemic Lupus, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus or cancer)
* Pregnant women: a urine pregnancy test will be performed for women of childbearing age. The results will be communicated to the patient by a doctor of his choice.
* Persons deprived of liberty (administrative or judicial)
* Persons under guardianship
* People may not understand the research
* Persons under guardianship, under judicial protection
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nice

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Barbara SEITZ-POLSKI, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Nice University Hospital

Locations

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CHU de Besançon

Besançon, , France

Site Status

AP-HM

Marseille, , France

Site Status

Nephrology Department, Nice University Hospital

Nice, , France

Site Status

Countries

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France

References

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Teisseyre M, Cremoni M, Boyer-Suavet S, Crepin T, Benzaken S, Zorzi K, Esnault V, Brglez V, Seitz-Polski B. Rituximab Immunomonitoring Predicts Remission in Membranous Nephropathy. Front Immunol. 2021 Oct 13;12:738788. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.738788. eCollection 2021.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 34721403 (View on PubMed)

Seitz-Polski B, Dahan K, Debiec H, Rousseau A, Andreani M, Zaghrini C, Ticchioni M, Rosenthal A, Benzaken S, Bernard G, Lambeau G, Ronco P, Esnault VLM. High-Dose Rituximab and Early Remission in PLA2R1-Related Membranous Nephropathy. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2019 Aug 7;14(8):1173-1182. doi: 10.2215/CJN.11791018. Epub 2019 Jul 24.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 31340979 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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14-AOI-05

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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