Abstract

Abstract Background and Aims Voclosporin is a novel calcineurin inhibitor with a favorable metabolic profile and a consistent dose-concentration relationship, potentially eliminating the need for therapeutic drug monitoring. We have previously reported the primary endpoint of the Phase 3 AURORA trial showing the addition of voclosporin to mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) and a low-dose glucocorticoid regimen results in significantly higher renal response (RR) rates at one year of treatment compared to MMF and low-dose glucocorticoids alone in patients with lupus nephritis (LN). For the primary endpoint, RR was defined as ≤0.5 mg/mg UPCR with stable renal function in the presence of low-dose glucocorticoids and no use of rescue medication. Several studies have demonstrated that proteinuria represents the best single predictor for long-term renal outcomes.1,2 Given the efficacy of voclosporin in terms of proteinuria reduction, we conducted a sensitivity analysis evaluating RR with additional UPCR targets. Method A total of 179 participants in the voclosporin (23.7 mg BID) arm and 178 participants in the control arm from the AURORA trial were included in this analysis. All participants received MMF (target 1 g BID) and low-dose oral glucocorticoids (initiated at 20-25 mg/day and tapered to 2.5 mg/day at 16 weeks). For this post hoc analysis, the UPCR component of RR was revised to include UPCR targets at 0.2 mg/mg intervals above and below the original ≤0.5 target used for the primary endpoint in AURORA (i.e., ≤0.7 mg/mg or ≤0.3 mg/mg, respectively). Odds ratios for RR at six months and one year of treatment were analyzed using a logistic regression model with terms for treatment, baseline UPCR, biopsy class, and MMF use at baseline and region. Results RR with UPCR ≤0.7 mg/mg was achieved by 46.9% of participants in the voclosporin arm vs 32.0% of participants in the control arm at one year of treatment (OR 2.07, p<0.0014) and 39.1% of participants in the voclosporin arm vs 24.7% of participants in the control arm at six months of treatment (OR 2.10, p=0.0020). RR with UPCR ≤0.3 mg/mg was achieved by 28.5% of participants in the voclosporin arm vs 15.7% of participants in the control arm at one year (OR 2.27, p=0.0023 and 22.9% of participants in the voclosporin arm vs 14.0% of participants in the control arm at six months of treatment (OR 1.90, p=0.0238; Table 1). Conclusion Participants treated with voclosporin in addition to MMF and low-dose glucocorticoids achieved statistically significantly increased renal response rates regardless of the level of UPCR used, including at an even more stringent ≤0.3 mg/mg target. This analysis further supports the efficacy observed with voclosporin in the Phase 3 AURORA and the prior Phase 2 AURA-LV global trials.

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