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Efficacy and safety of eculizumab in children with Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli haemolytic uraemic syndrome: the ECUSTEC RCT

Ives, Natalie; Woolley, Rebecca; Saleem, Moin A.; Moakes, Catherine A.; Waters, Aoife; Gilbert, Rodney D.; Jarrett, Hugh; Brettell, Elizabeth; Nash, Steve; Farmer, Louise K.; Ourradi, Khadija; Johnson, Sally A.

Efficacy and safety of eculizumab in children with Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli haemolytic uraemic syndrome: the ECUSTEC RCT Thumbnail


Authors

Natalie Ives

Rebecca Woolley

Moin A. Saleem

Catherine A. Moakes

Aoife Waters

Rodney D. Gilbert

Elizabeth Brettell

Steve Nash

Louise K. Farmer

Khadija Ourradi

Sally A. Johnson



Abstract

Background

Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli haemolytic uraemic syndrome affects ~100 United Kingdom children each year. Around half need dialysis, a quarter develop serious complications with long-term consequences and ~3% die. No effective intervention is known; however, some studies report eculizumab, effective in atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome, may be effective.

Objectives

To determine whether the severity of Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli haemolytic uraemic syndrome is less in those given eculizumab.

Design

Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group trial with internal pilot phase and nested mechanistic laboratory studies.

Setting

Paediatric nephrology units in 12 United Kingdom hospitals.

Participants

Children aged 6 months to < 19 years weighing ≥ 5 kg, with presumed Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli haemolytic uraemic syndrome, including ‘injury’ or ‘failure’ category of the acute kidney injury paediatric risk/injury/failure/loss/end criteria.

Intervention

Participants were randomised in a 1 : 1 ratio to receive intravenous eculizumab or placebo on day 1 and 8. All received meningococcal vaccination and prophylactic antibiotics.

Main outcome measures

The primary outcome measure was a multidomain clinical severity score, reflecting morbidity until day 60. Secondary outcome measures included survival, duration of renal replacement therapy, persistent neurological defect (day 60) and presence of chronic kidney disease at 1 year. Mechanistic studies assessed complement activation and vascular endothelial growth factor profiles in plasma ± urine samples. In vitro cell co-culture work assessed the effect of Shiga toxin on endothelial cells.

Results

Thirty-six participants from 10 sites were randomised: 17 to eculizumab and 19 to placebo. The target sample size was 134 participants – recruitment stopped early due to low recruitment (factors included reduced incidence and limited out-of-hours research infrastructure) and the COVID-19 pandemic. The mean clinical severity score for participants randomised to eculizumab was 11.5 (standard deviation 8.4) compared to 14.6 (standard deviation 7.7) for participants randomised to placebo (adjusted mean difference: −2.5, 95% confidence interval −7.8 to 2.8, p = 0.3). Five participants (three eculizumab, two placebo) experienced an adverse event; there were seven serious adverse events in six participants (five eculizumab, one placebo). Urinary complement factor H and vascular endothelial growth factor levels were high initially and subsequently normalised. Shiga toxin caused a podocyte-dependent decrease in endothelial cell factor H levels.

Conclusions and limitations

There was no significant difference in mean clinical severity score between eculizumab and placebo groups – since the trial was underpowered, this cannot be interpreted as evidence of no effect. No significant safety concerns were observed. With further validation, the Eculizumab in Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli Haemolytic Uraemic Syndrome clinical severity score may be an outcome measure for future trials. Our results imply that Shiga toxin causes complement-dependent glomerular endothelial cell injury through its action on podocytes and subsequent cellular cross-talk.

Future work

We will continue to investigate cross talk between podocytes and endothelial cells after exposure to Shiga toxin and further develop plasma/urine biomarkers for diagnosis of Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli haemolytic uraemic syndrome.

Citation

Ives, N., Woolley, R., Saleem, M. A., Moakes, C. A., Waters, A., Gilbert, R. D., Jarrett, H., Brettell, E., Nash, S., Farmer, L. K., Ourradi, K., & Johnson, S. A. (2024). Efficacy and safety of eculizumab in children with Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli haemolytic uraemic syndrome: the ECUSTEC RCT. Health Technology Assessment, 11(11), 1-78. https://doi.org/10.3310/rfty4766

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 16, 2023
Publication Date 2024-07
Deposit Date May 23, 2025
Publicly Available Date May 27, 2025
Journal Health Technology Assessment
Print ISSN 1366-5278
Electronic ISSN 2046-4924
Publisher NIHR Journals Library
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Issue 11
Pages 1-78
DOI https://doi.org/10.3310/rfty4766
Keywords shiga toxin, haemolytic uraemic syndrome, aHUS
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/49283025
Publisher URL https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/eme/RFTY4766