Official Title:
Effectiveness, Tolerability, and Safety of Belimumab in Patients With Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Treated at the Spanish Departments of Internal Medicine
If Stopped, Why?:
Not Stopped
Has Expanded Access:
False
If Expanded Access, NCT#:
N/A
Has Expanded Access, NCT# Status:
N/A
Brief Summary:
The BeliLES-GEAS project pretends to obtain an extensive data registry of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).
The main objective is to create a national SLE patients registry treated with belimumab to describe effectiveness and safety of intravenous (IV) or subcutaneous (SC) belimumab in patients with active SLE treated in the Spanish departments of Internal Medicine in a real-life setting. This research project aspires to cover the vast majority (if not the whole) of SLE patients treated with belimumab in all of the Spanish Departments of Internal Medicine.
Detailed Description:
The goal of BeliLES-GEAS registry is to create an observational, non-randomized, non-controlled, national multicenter prospective and retrospective cohort with the aim to explore the real performance, with its lights and shadows, of Belimumab, either IV or SC, in a real-world population of lupus patients.
The intention is to perform a longer-term follow up, so that the measure of hard outcomes, such as improvement in mortality, could be feasible, but also reliable data regarding the safety profile could be recorded.
In order to achieve that, the following variables will be included: individual criteria as part of 2019 EULAR/ACR, SLICC or ACR 1997 classification criteria, gender, age at diagnosis, age at symptoms onset, duration of the disease, age at first Belimumab administration, mean time of follow-up prior to, and from Belimumab administration, complete medical history including other systemic autoimmune diseases, type/s of organ/systems affected by SLE, prior immunosuppressants received, number of flares 2 years prior Belimumab onset, number of medical visits, number of days of sick leave, type of disease, treatment and laboratory data. As a measure of damage, Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics-Damage Index (SLICC-DI) score will be calculated at baseline and at 12, 18, 24 months and yearly of follow-up. All centers will be requested to provide the SLICC-DI calculated annually of the last five years before the initiation of belimumab, when available.
The efficacy will be evaluated as time to reach any of the definition of remission included in the DORIS (definitions of remission in SLE) consensus, or LLDAs (lupus low disease activity state). Regarding the safety of Belimumab in real-world setting, it will be defined and evaluated by documenting adverse events.