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Progress in the treatment of proliferative lupus nephritis

Authors :
Howard A. Austin
James E. Balow
Source :
Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension. 9:107-115
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2000.

Abstract

Lupus nephritis is often well developed at the time of diagnosis. High-dose corticosteroids are universally accepted as the initial approach to the control of severe inflammation in the kidney. Long-term disease control and the minimization of iatrogenic risk usually require adjunctive therapies that target the more fundamental immunoregulatory disturbances of lymphoid cells. Of the available cytotoxic drugs, cyclophosphamide is currently among the most effective, although it cannot be considered ideal in terms of efficacy or toxicity. New prospects for the treatment of proliferative lupus nephritis include novel immunosuppressive agents (e.g. mycophenolate, cyclosporine, fludarabine), combination chemotherapy (e.g. cyclophosphamide plus fludarabine), and sequential chemotherapy (e.g. cyclophosphamide-azathioprine), immunological reconstitution using intensive cytoreductive chemotherapy (with or without stem cell rescue), co-stimulatory molecule inhibition (e.g. humanized anti-CD154 monoclonal antibody, CTLA4-Ig). Gene therapy remains an attractive prospect, but its feasibility clearly depends on the further definition of lupus-promoting genes and the availability of methods to establish stable expression of disease-corrective genes in the appropriate lymphoid cells.

Details

ISSN :
10624821
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....21c46d557b9896de343bfde75cc64464
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/00041552-200003000-00003