Extramembranous Glomerulopathy Clinical Trial
Official title:
In Vitro Study of the Efficacy of Different Immunomodulators on the Th17/Treg Balance in a Cohort of Relapsed Membranous Nephropathy
In order to propose the best therapeutic option to relapsed MN patients with strong activation of the Th17 pathway, the investigators propose to study in vitro the effect of different immunomodulators on the Th17/Treg balance, assessed by cytokine profile and lymphocyte phenotyping using flow cytometry.
Membranous Nephropathy (MN) is a rare autoimmune renal disease and the first cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults. In one third of cases, it progresses to end-stage renal failure. Rituximab has shown very good efficacy (60-80%) and excellent safety in this indication. However, one third of MN patients relapse after a course of rituximab, raising the question of maintenance treatment or repeated courses of rituximab whose long-term impact is unknown. The investigators studied the cytokine profile of MN patients and demonstrated, after non-specific stimulation of innate immunity cells and T cells, a Th17 profile (increased levels of interleukin-6 (Il-6) and interleukin-17A (Il-17A) compared to healthy subjects), and inhibition of the Th1 (decreased IL-12p70 and Interferon-γ (IFN-γ)) and T regulatory T reg pathways (decreased IL-10) (doi: 10. 3389/fimmu.2020.574997). Th17 cells and Treg cells with interconnected development have opposite roles. Th17 cells induce inflammation to initiate a reaction against a pathogen, while Treg cells control an inflammatory reaction. The investigators showed that high Il-17A levels were associated with a risk of thrombotic events (p = 0.03) and relapse (p = 0.0006). A patient with an IL-17A level > 73 pg/ml had a 10.5-fold increased risk of relapse. Rituximab-induced remission leads to an increase in Treg and Th1 pathway cytokines but has no impact on IL-17A production, which remains important even in remission. Thus, in this group of patients with high IL-17A levels, targeted action on B lymphocytes is probably not sufficient to avoid relapse and the addition of a treatment aimed at inhibiting the Th17 pathway and promoting Treg induction seems legitimate. Various potential treatment exist: anti-Il-6 antibodies (tocilizumab), anti-Il-17 antibodies (secukinumab), low-dose Il-2 (a few studies have demonstrated its ability to induce Treg in various autoimmune diseases), hydroxychloroquine in low doses (used in lupus to limit relapses and having an anti-inflammatory effect), the plant extract Alphanosos (anti-Th1) or Levamizole (validated in nephrotic syndrome in children). In order to propose the best therapeutic option to relapsed MN patients with a strong activation of the Th17 pathway, the investigators propose to study in vitro the effect of these different immunomodulators on the Th17/Treg balance evaluated by cytokine profile and lymphocyte phenotyping in flow cytometry. ;