Efficacy and safety of low-dose IL-2 in the treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Author:

He JingORCID,Zhang Ruijun,Shao Miao,Zhao Xiaozhen,Miao Miao,Chen Jiali,Liu Jiajia,Zhang Xiaoying,Zhang Xia,Jin Yuebo,Wang Yu,Zhang Shilei,Zhu Lei,Jacob Alexander,Jia Rulin,You Xujie,Li Xue,Li Chun,Zhou Yunshan,Yang Yue,Ye Hua,Liu Yanying,Su Yin,Shen Nan,Alexander Jessy,Guo JianpingORCID,Ambrus Julian,Lin Xin,Yu Di,Sun Xiaolin,Li Zhanguo

Abstract

ObjectivesOpen-labelled clinical trials suggested that low-dose IL-2 might be effective in treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). A double-blind and placebo-controlled trial is required to formally evaluate the safety and efficacy of low-dose IL-2 therapy.MethodsA randomised, double-blind and placebo-controlled clinical trial was designed to treat 60 patients with active SLE. These patients received either IL-2 (n=30) or placebo (n=30) with standard treatment for 12 weeks, and were followed up for additional 12 weeks. IL-2 at a dose of 1 million IU or placebo was administered subcutaneously every other day for 2 weeks and followed by a 2-week break as one treatment cycle. The primary endpoint was the SLE Responder Index-4 (SRI-4) at week 12. The secondary endpoints were other clinical responses, safety and dynamics of immune cell subsets.ResultsAt week 12, the SRI-4 response rates were 55.17% and 30.00% for IL-2 and placebo, respectively (p=0.052). At week 24, the SRI-4 response rate of IL-2 group was 65.52%, compared with 36.67% of the placebo group (p=0.027). The primary endpoint was not met at week 12. Low-dose IL-2 treatment resulted in 53.85% (7/13) complete remission in patients with lupus nephritis, compared with 16.67% (2/12) in the placebo group (p=0.036). No serious infection was observed in the IL-2 group, but two in placebo group. Besides expansion of regulatory T cells, low-dose IL-2 may also sustain cellular immunity with enhanced natural killer cells.ConclusionsLow-dose IL-2 might be effective and tolerated in treatment of SLE.Trial registration numberClinicalTrials.gov Registries (NCT02465580 and NCT02932137).

Funder

Beijing Sci-Tech Committee

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy,Rheumatology

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