Molly Mary Thabah MD Medicine
Professor and Head
Clinical Immunology & Rheumatology, JIPMER Puducherry, India
The current standard of care for induction of remission in lupus nephritis (LN) is glucocorticoids and immunosuppression (IST) with either intravenous (IV) cyclophosphamide (CYC) or oral mycophenolate mofetil (MMF). A complete response to treatment as per EULAR/ERA-EDTA and BSR recommendations should ideally be achieved within 12 months of starting induction therapy. This is defined by the normalization of kidney function, marked by stable or improving glomerular filtration rate (GFR), and reduction in proteinuria to normal or near-normal levels (< 0.5 g/day or a urine protein-to-creatinine ratio (UPCR) <500 to 700mg/g). Some patients respond partially, defined as a reduction in proteinuria by at least 50% from baseline levels, with the UPCR falling < 500–700 mg/g within 6 to 12 months.
There is a subset of patients who show no significant reduction in proteinuria, who have persistent active urinary sediments, or worsening renal function—they are classified as having refractory or difficult-to-treat (DTT) lupus nephritis.
American College of Rheumatology (ACR) provides a slightly different treatment response timeline and considers lupus nephritis as a refractory if there is disease worsening at 3 months or if treatment failure is evident by 6 months. Thus, the ACR definition leads to an earlier declaration of refractory disease compared to the EULAR/ERA-EDTA criteria, as the assessment is done within 3-6 months of initiating therapy.
Nevertheless, when we talk about refractory or DTT it generally means a failure to achieve adequate response to first-line immunosuppressive therapies within a specified timeframe.
The causes of difficult-to-treat lupus nephritis are multifactorial and are listed below
Immunological Factors:
Histopathological Features:
Genetic Factors:
Patient-Related Factors: