Read The Lupus Book: A Guide for Patients and Their Families, Third Edition Online
Authors: Daniel J. Wallace
Also, the onset of menopause is associated with milder disease. I occasionally
allow reluctant patients with long-standing mild lupus to avoid medicine unless they are at risk for major complications.
WHAT DO LUPUS PATIENTS DIE OF?
The natural course of SLE has been extensively studied and researchers have
come to some interesting conclusions. The concept of a ‘‘bimodal survival
curve’’ was first proposed in the 1970s and subsequently validated. This means
that some lupus patients who die from the disease do so within the first 2 to 3
years of developing it. These individuals have active, aggressive lupus that responds poorly to therapy. After the third year, however, there’s a lengthy hiatus of 10 to 15 years with few lupus-related deaths. But at 15 to 20 years, the effects of years of disease and medication seem to catch up with some patients, and a
second mortality ‘‘hump’’ is observed. For example, young women who have
active disease and are given moderate to high doses of steroids when they are
20 do well for a while, but eventually may experience complications from on-
going steroid therapy. This leads to diabetes, high blood pressure, elevated cholesterols, and obesity—which may result in heart attacks by the time they are
40, as in Bonnie’s case (Chapter 14).
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The Management of Lupus Erythematosus
More than 90 percent of lupus patients with SLE die from one of five causes:
complications of kidney disease, infections, central nervous system lupus, blood clots, or cardiovascular complications. For unknown reasons, fatal cancer is rare among lupus patients. Several trends have become evident since survival curves
were first published in the 1950s. Improved methods of dialysis and the intro-
duction of transplantation have substantially decreased kidney-related deaths.
Superior methods of detecting and managing central nervous system lupus have
also greatly decreased mortality from this complication. Unfortunately, infec-
tions are still a major cause of death, especially among patients receiving steroids or chemotherapy. The discovery of antiphospholipid antibodies in the 1980s and
the use of blood thinning to prevent serious clots and strokes in patients at risk have not yet had an impact on survival in lupus, but improvements will be
evident soon. Some types of lupus are still very difficult to treat, and insufficient progress has been made to improve survival. These subsets include those patients with pulmonary hypertension, mesenteric vasculitis, and TTP (thrombotic
thrombocytopenic purpura). Bimodal survival curves are still relevant, but many fewer lupus patients are dying in the first 2 years.
Summing Up
The outcome of SLE depends on who is treating the disease; which ethnic,
racial, or geographically defined populations have the disease; and their socioeconomic status and therefore their access to subspecialty care; and the treatment philosophy of the health-care provider. In any case, more than 90 percent of all lupus patients in the United States live more than 10 years after being diagnosed.
The survival of patients with organ-threatening disease is still an unsatisfactory 60 percent at 15 years. Patients with high blood pressure, low platelet counts, kidney disease, and severe anemia have a poorer outcome and should be managed aggressively. Mild lupus occasionally disappears spontaneously; serious
lupus may ease up but does not go away without treatment. Deaths from lupus
generally occur early on from active disease or later from continuously active
inflammation or complications of therapy. Finally, in spite of all that has been said, I have found that patients who have a positive attitude and good coping
mechanisms and employ proactive strategies with their physicians have a better
prognosis.
What advances will take place in the next 15 years? Will we be able to cure
lupus or prevent it? Is there anything to look forward to? Let’s take a look at what the future holds—and it is indeed promising!
If developments proceed at the expected rate, my crystal ball suggests that
by the year 2020, an integrated health-care system will be in place, allowing all lupus patients to receive optimal treatment regardless of socioeconomic status
or medical insurability. A national data network should reveal exactly how many lupus patients there are as well as their gender and their racial, ethnic, and
occupational background. The gene or combination of genes that predispose one
to SLE and the environmental factors (viruses, chemicals, drugs, etc.) that turn these genes on will be known. It should be possible to identify individuals at
risk for developing the disease and perhaps to vaccinate them so as to prevent
autoimmune reactions. By 2020, we will know why 90 percent of patients with
lupus are women, and we’ll be able to manipulate hormones to decrease the
disease’s severity.
Existing therapies for lupus will be fine-tuned and improved upon. An ideal
NSAID that treats mild inflammation without any adverse reactions, which may
already be on the horizon, will be marketed. New-generation antimalarials and
steroids that eliminate most of the side effects we associate with these agents should soon be available.
Our current chemotherapy approaches are very general: they suppress all types
of white blood cells and do not substantially focus on any single ‘‘bad guy’’
subset. Increased use of combinations of chemotherapies that act at different
levels of the inflammatory and immune process will be commonplace. The major
advances in lupus therapy will emphasize cellular and antibody manipulation.
HOW ARE DRUGS STUDIED FOR LUPUS?
No new drug has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
for lupus since the 1960s. As of this writing (November, 2004), the only drugs
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The Management of Lupus Erythematosus
approved for SLE are Plaquenil, prednisolone (Medrol, a relative of prednisone), and aspirin. To be frank, manufacturers were scared away from studying lupus
for a variety of reasons. First, there was no agreed upon guideline or index used to denote improvement in the disease. Second, lupus patients often had multisystem disease with unpredictable complications which made it hard to tell if a drug was working. Also, until recently organized lupus advocacy was weak and
fragmented. As a result, promising new immune therapies were tested in other
autoimmune conditions. In 2003, under the leadership of Lee Simon, the FDA
sponsored hearings which led to development of a guidance document which
should jump-start interest in testing new drugs for the disease. The document
recognizes the importance of a variety of disease activity and outcome measures, which are discussed below.
Classification of Lupus
Any patient participating in a clinical SLE trial will have to fulfill the ACR
criteria for lupus. Although flawed (see Chapter 2) and though revision attempts are underway, they are still 90 percent sensitive and specific for diagnosing the disease.
Clinical Activity Indices
Since the mid-1980s, several centers have developed indices which assess dis-
ease activity. By giving points for specific symptoms, signs and laboratory ab-
normalities, these indices allowed investigators to follow improvement or wors-
ening of the disease through a composite score. The most thorough and accurate
index is the BILAG (British Isles Lupus Assessment Group), but it requires
considerable time to compile and expensive software to be run on. It should
only be used in performing complicated clinical trials. Any investigator can
calculate a SLEDAI (Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index) or
SLAM (Systemic Lupus Activity Measure) in a couple of minutes, and these
indices complement BILAG. The SLEDAI is more weighted to measure serious,
organ threatening activity, while SLAM includes more laboratory determinations
and subjective factors. The ECLAM (European Consensus Lupus Activity Mea-
surement) and National Institutes of Health derived SIS are also useful.
Response Measures
Determining whether or not a drug leads to worsening, no change, a partial
response, or resolution of a particular aspect of lupus has been the focus of
intense investigation recently. An example of such an instrument is the RIFLE
(Responder Index for Lupus Erythematosus).
New Therapies for Lupus and Future Directions
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Quality of Life
Several instruments which have been validated for other diseases have been
shown to be helpful in lupus as well. These include measuring health related
quality of life using the SF-36 (which evaluates physical functioning, physical role, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, emotional roles, and mental health), HAQ (Health Assessment Questionnaire) score, patient and
physician assessments of the disease, disability, and Krupp Fatigue Severity
Scale Index.
Drug Safety
A new agent must not only be effective, but it also must be safe. Adverse events from a drug’s administration must be outweighed by its potential benefits.
Damage Indices
The ACR and SLICC have developed and validated a Damage Index. Prior
inflammation can scar the kidneys, heart, lung, kidney, or liver, producing ir-
reversible changes. If a drug can prevent new damage by slowing the rate of
increase of a damage index, it is potentially useful.
Biomarker or Surrogate Markers
In the past, clinicians used sedimentation rates, C3 complement, and anti-DNA
levels to assess disease activity and adjusted medication based on these values.
It turns out that some of these markers, or a combination of these markers
correlates with long-term outcome. If a new drug can improve these markers, it
may decrease the time necessary to test it since it often takes 10 years of ob-
servation to know if a treatment protocol for the kidneys, for example, prevents one from needing dialysis. The FDA is studying the use of traditional and newly developed markers in its lupus drug testing evaluations.
The Bottom Line
In order for a new drug to be approved for lupus, it should ideally decrease
clinical disease activity by clinical indices or biomarkers, prevent damage, be safe, and improve one’s quality of life.
WHAT DRUGS ARE BEING TESTED FOR LUPUS?
Only a handful of lupus drug trials were conducted in the 1990s. This section
provides a brief review of agents which are undergoing testing around the world.
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Refractory skin disease:
Ultraviolet A-1 light, newer vehicles (polar solvents, liposomal encapsulation, enthosmoal systems, iontophoresis, electro-
poration, sonophoresis), epidermal grafting, cryotherapy, lasers (argon, carbon dioxide, erbium: YAG), topical immunophylles (tacrolimus, pinecrolimus).
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs:
Celecoxib (Celebrex)
Antimalarials:
isomeric forms of Plaquenil and quinacrine may be studied in the next few years
Corticosteroids:
budesonide
Hormones:
testosterone patches, leuprolide for fertility sparing purposes
Traditional immune suppressives:
newer insights into methotrexate and azathioprine metabolism will result in studies of measuring blood levels and
genetic factors which can predict response; intrathecal methotrexate for central nervous system lupus
Immunophylles:
transplant patients receiving cyclosporine A, tacrolimus and rapamycin with lupus will be followed and trials with cycylosporine are ongoing
Newer immune suppressive:
several mycophenolate mofetil trials are on-
going
Apheresis:
columns which remove specific components (e.g., anti-DNA,
staph protein A, C1q) are being evaluated
Vasodilators:
prostaglandin derivatives and bosentan for Raynaud’s and pulmonary hypertension
WHAT ABOUT BIOLOGICS?
Most drugs traditionally used for serious lupus are immune suppressives. In
other words, they lower blood counts and kill cells. However, these agents kill good cells as well as bad cells. In the early 1990s, a group of drugs known as
TNF (tumor necrosis factor) blockers was shown to be effective and approved
for managing rheumatoid arthritis. TNF blockers are known as biologics since
they do not lower blood counts and target a specific chemical interaction. Some patients with lupus have been treated with TNF blockade. Those with lupus
arthritis who do not have anti-DNA have generally done well, but this agent
can cause a drug induced lupus in rheumatoid and inflammatory bowel disease
patients since they stimulate the formation of autoantibodies such as anti-DNA, ANA, and anticardiolipin antibody. Most of the time this is of little significance, but sometimes clinical lupus evolves which goes away with the drug’s discontinuation. Most lupologists generally avoid the use of these agents in SLE unless the clinical presentation is one of primary rheumatoid arthritis.
New Therapies for Lupus and Future Directions
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Biologics have recently begun to be studied for lupus and are reviewed below.
Biologics tested for lupus no longer under study:
anti-CD4, anti-CD5 ricin A im-munoconjugate, human recombinant DNAse, IDEC anti-CD40-L (all ineffective),