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About
Cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE) is a heterogeneous inflammatory autoimmune disease associated or not with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Active CLE often cause pain/burning sensation and may lead to permanent visible scars and cicatricial alopecia, with psycho-social consequences/poor quality of life. First-line antimalarials (AMs) are recommended in CLE in addition to topical corticosteroids/tacrolimus with long-term response rate around 50%. Oral glucocorticosteroids (GCs) are recommended in addition to AMs for short term therapy in severe or widespread active CLE lesions. In non-responders to AMs and low-dose oral GCs, i.e., difficult-to-treat CLE, guidelines recommend the add-on of methotrexate as preferential second-line agent, with an overall efficacy of 50% in observational studies. Thalidomide has shown response rate of ≈90% in CLE in a meta-analysis of observational studies and is recommended as a second or third-line agent. However, potential severe adverse events (AEs) including teratogenicity, peripheral neuropathy and thromboembolic events limit its use.
Biological therapies including belimumab and anifrolumab, are approved only for patients with associated SLE (and not for those with isolated CLE). Their efficacy has been demonstrated as add-on therapy versus placebo but not versus a comparative drug. Moreover, efficacy of belimumab seems limited in difficult to-treat CLE and has not been assessed using validated tool, as the Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus Disease Area and Severity (CLASI) Index. Anifrolumab seems interesting in CLE associated with SLE, but its use is limited by monthly intravenous infusions, high cost and unknown long-term AEs. Moreover, its efficacy in isolated CLE has not been assessed.
Lenalidomide is a thalidomide analogue with in vitro 1000 more potent immunomodulatory properties. It is recommended as a third-line treatment in France. With more than 60 treated patients, it showed excellent and rapid efficacy with an absence of drowsiness and peripheral neuropathy with a low-dose regimen of 5 mg/day. The use of lenalidomide was to date limited by its very high cost and its indications were restricted to haematological disorders. For note, the prevention of the higher risk of thromboembolism with lenalidomide requires the daily use of low-dose aspirin.
In France, a generic of lenalidomide is now available with a monthly cost of 2 euros, allowing a broad-scale assessment of its efficacy. Finally, lenalidomide might have a better efficacy than methotrexate.
We hypothesize that lenalidomide would be more efficacious than methotrexate in difficult-to-treat CLE patients with or without associated SLE. We assume that such trial would not be supported by pharmaceutical companies.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients of at least 18 years of age
Affiliated to the French social security
Able to provide written informed consent
Histologically-confirmed diagnosis of active CLE with or without associated SLE, either historical or at screening
CLASI-A score ≥ 8 at both screening and randomization
Active CLE despite
Accepting monthly plasma pregnancy test and using adequate contraception for at least 4 weeks before and until 4 weeks following treatment
Exclusion criteria
Kidney function, liver function, cell blood count and infectious serology incompatible with receiving the study treatments, according to the SMPC of each drug.
Alcoholism (1/ no more than 10 standard drinks per week, 2/ no more than two standard drinks per day, and 3/ at least two alcohol-free days every week)
Ongoing cancer, including solid tumors and hematologic malignancies
Active severe SLE features including lupus nephritis, neuropsychiatric SLE, serositis, severe haematological features (autoimmune hemolytic anemia, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura) requiring high dose oral or IV GC and/or mycophenolate mofetil or cyclophosphamide
Medications:
Contraindication to use low-dose aspirin: salicylate hypersensitivity, salicylate-induced asthma, constitutional or acquired bleeding disorder, active gastroduodenal ulcer, or history of digestive bleeding.
Arterial or unprovoked venous thromboembolic events ≤ 5 years (for note antiphospholipid syndrome treated with vitamin K antagonist without thromboembolic events in the last 5 years or patients with positive antiphospholipid autoantibodies will NOT be excluded)
Pregnant women, breastfeeding or planning to become pregnant during the study treatment period and 1 month after the last dose of study treatment
Patients under legal protection and inability to comply with study requirement
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
122 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Olivier CHOSIDOW; François CHASSET
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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