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. 2021 Nov 15;2021(11):CD004293. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004293.pub4

Imbasciati 1980.

Study characteristics
Methods
  • Study design: parallel, open‐label RCT

  • Study duration: 1976 to 1985

  • Duration of follow‐up: median 5 years (2 to 11) in the first report and 10 years in the second report

Participants
  • setting: multicentre

  • country: Italy

  • Inclusion criteria: biopsy‐proven IMN with nephrotic syndrome

  • Baseline characteristics

    • Pathology stage (I/II/III/IV): treatment group (11/21/8/2); control group (7/23/7/2)

    • Mean proteinuria ± SD (g/24 hours): treatment group (6.18 ± 2.98); control group (5.30 ± 2.84)

    • Hypertension: treatment group (8/42); control group (12/39)

    • Mean SCr ± SD (μmol/L): treatment group (93.8 ± 21.5); control group (93.1 ± 25.3)

    • Baseline declining kidney function: no

    • Use of ACEi or ARB during follow‐up: yes; 2 (1 per group) were recorded to receive captopril during the 5‐year follow‐up

    • Previous immunosuppressive status: patients who had previously received steroids or cytotoxic therapy were excluded

  • Number: treatment group (42); control group (39)

  • Mean age, range (years): treatment group (43.5, 15 to 70); control group (42, 16 to 74)

  • Sex (M/F): treatment group (34/8); control group (29/10)

  • Exclusion criteria: < 16 years; SCr > 150 µmol/L; previous steroid or cytotoxic therapy; clinical or biological evidence of SLE, DM, drug reaction, viral hepatitis, or other infection

Interventions Treatment group
  • Chlorambucil + steroids

    1. Methylprednisolone (IV): 1g was given for 20 to 30 minutes on 3 consecutive days

    2. Cycle A: on day 4, oral methylprednisolone (0.4 mg/kg/day) or prednisone (0.5 mg/kg/day) was given in a single morning dose for 27 days. At the end of the first month, the steroid was discontinued

    3. Cycle B: chlorambucil (0.2 mg/kg/day) for 1 month; the dose was lowered if the leukocyte count fell below 5.0x109/L. After 1 month the chlorambucil was discontinued

    4. Cycle A

    5. Cycle B

    6. Cycle A

    7. Cycle B

  • The entire duration of the treatment period was 6 months. During the study, it was decided that clinicians would be free to treat the patients again, but not until 2 years after the first 6‐month course of therapy. No patient relapsed within the first 2 years


Control group
  • No specific therapy


Co‐interventions
  • Both the treatment and control groups received low salt diets and were given a diuretic and antihypertensive agents as needed

Outcomes
  • Death

  • ESKD

  • 50% or 100% SCr increase

  • Final SCr

  • Partial or complete remission

  • Final proteinuria

  • Side effects leading to patient withdrawal or hospitalisation

Notes
  • Funding information: supported in part by a grant (82.01308.04) from the Consiglio Nazionale delle Rice

Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Low risk For all patients, the indications for therapy were contained in sealed, completely opaque envelopes numbered in sequence according to a table of random numbers
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Low risk Randomisation method described could not allow investigators/participants to know or influence intervention group before eligible participant entered in the study
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias)
All outcomes High risk Open‐label study
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias)
All outcomes Unclear risk Insufficient information to permit judgement
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias)
All outcomes Low risk Four patients in the treatment group did not complete the 6‐month therapy, these patients were continued to be followed up because of side effects. They were considered to be treated patients in the data analysis, according to the intention‐to‐treat principle. In the case of patients who died, data obtained before the time of death were included. 3/81 patients (3%) were lost to 5‐year follow‐up: two controls and one treated patient were lost to follow‐up 22, 28, and 24 months after randomisation, respectively. At the second analysis, 9/42 (21%) treated patients and 10/39 (26%) controls were lost to follow‐up from 12 to 96 months after randomisation. These 3 patients were also considered in the analyses
Selective reporting (reporting bias) Low risk The study protocol was not available but it was clear that the published reports included all expected outcomes, including those that were pre‐specified
Other bias Low risk The study appeared to be free of other sources of bias