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C3G Management Discussion
Background Therapy
- All C3G patients require nonimmunosuppressive background therapy:
- Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system blockers (essential)
- SGLT2 inhibitors (recommended)
- Potential additions: glucagon-like peptide-1 agonists and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists
Disease Progression
- Most C3G patients will progress despite conservative background therapy
- Management approaches have evolved significantly over the past 15 years
Traditional Immunosuppressive Approaches
- Various nonspecific immunosuppressive regimens have been tried
- Mycophenolate-based regimens with steroids (similar to lupus nephritis treatment) showed the most consistent benefit
- Most effective in patients with nephritic factors (60%-70% chance of significant proteinuria reduction)
- Limitation: Re-biopsies show continued accumulation of chronicity despite treatment
Limitations of B-Cell–Directed Therapies
- Despite C3G having autoimmune characteristics, B-cell–targeting agents have proven ineffective
- Possible explanations:
- Nephritic factors may not always be pathogenic
- Nephritic factors might only initiate the disease process, with complement dysregulation continuing independently afterward
New Era of Complement-Targeting Therapies
- First complement-targeting drug (Iptacopan) received FDA approval for C3G
- At least 1 other similar agent is expected to receive approval soon
- These targeted therapies address the underlying disease mechanism rather than just symptoms
- Even in patients with nephritic factors, complement-targeting therapy is now preferred over antibody-depleting approaches
Clinical Implications
- Treatment paradigm has shifted from nonspecific immunosuppression to targeted complement inhibition
Physicians should consider these newer options as they become available for C3G management