Outcomes for lupus patients will
continue to improve as a result of a new collaborator joining the Monash lupus research
group at the School of Clinical
Sciences at Monash Health (SCS).
The global biopharmaceutical
company Janssen Research & Development, LLC (Janssen)
will participate in the Lupus Low Disease Activity State (LLDAS) Study, an
international, multi-centre study investigating whether attaining LLDAS is
associated with improved outcomes in patients with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
(SLE).
Janssen joins existing
collaborators, UCB Biopharma SPRL and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) to fund
research led by Professor
Eric Morand, Head of SCS and Head of Rheumatology at Monash Health, to develop and validate
treatment targets in lupus.
“Our research will validate for
the first time a treatment target in lupus,” said Professor Morand.
In the Monash-led study by the
Asia Pacific Lupus Collaboration (APLC), investigators have devised a new way
to simply measure responses to treatment in lupus.
“This funding will support the
APLC validation of this method, and when validated, we expect our treatment
target will be used in clinical trials and in clinical practice to drive better
outcomes for patients,” added Professor Morand.
Since recruiting their first
patient more than two years ago, the LLDAS study has recently achieved their
first milestone—1873 patients have been enrolled and their baseline data has
been collected, cleaned and analysed.
The research team is now focussed
on achieving their next milestone, collecting the longitudinal data of this
same cohort of patients.
Professor Morand said that this
study will create one of the largest data sets on lupus patients ever
collected.
“This data has a huge number of
other potential uses in research that will be of interest to academics,
clinicians, patients, government and industry,” he added.
The first stage of this important
research study was published last week in Annals of the Rheumatic
Diseases, the leading journal in the field of rheumatology.
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