Improving on past trial missteps
One of the coinvestigators on the blisibimod trial, Dr. Richard A. Furie, discussed missteps in the design of earlier studies. "Trials of new biologic therapies have taught us to be humble and logical, and to persevere – we’ve made a lot of mistakes over last 20 years," he told the conference, pointing to a handful of trials in which subjects did not have serologic evidence of disease at baseline. "In my book, if someone is clinically active they should have autoantibodies," he said. "So the rules for entry were changed for all trials."
Dr. Furie, chief of the division of rheumatology and allergy-clinical immunology in the North Shore–LIJ Health System and professor of medicine at Hofstra University, Hempstead, N.Y., said that while inclusion criteria had improved, investigators of biologic agents still had far to go in refining SLE trial endpoints. "No two endpoints are the same – we’ve customized the endpoints and are struggling with extrarenal trials whether it should be a single or composite endpoint, whether it should be based on SLEDAI or BILAG alone or should we use SRI – there is no consensus." Echoing Dr. Merrill, he stressed that background medications were another area in need of increased scrutiny and consensus. "Each trial has handled steroids and immunosuppressants differently," he said.
Dr. Merrill has received support from Genentech. Dr. Furie has received support from Anthera, Genentech, and UCB Pharma. Both rheumatologists have received support from many other companies involved in lupus research and therapy.