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Addressing Lupus Pillars for Health Advancement

The First Step to Moving Lupus Research Forward

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The ALPHA Project: What is it?

ALPHA stands for Addressing Lupus Pillars for Health Advancement. The Project is a comprehensive, multi-phase, global consensus initiative aimed not only at identifying and prioritizing the top challenges in the lupus field, but also creating actionable solutions to address these issues and stimulate progress.

The goal of the ALPHA Project is to bring together international lupus experts to develop and implement strategies to address the critical barriers toward improving outcomes in lupus.

The Project is led by the Lupus Foundation of America in collaboration with the Tufts University School of Medicine Center for the Study of Drug Development and a Global Advisory Committee (GAC) of lupus experts representing industry, academia and the patient voice.

Phase I Results

Through Phase I of the ALPHA Project, the international lupus community reached the first-ever agreement on the barriers to lupus research, drug development, care and access. Using a combination of interviews and survey with lupus thought leaders in research, clinical practice, biopharmaceutical industry, government and patient advocacy organizations, the ALPHA Project identified the most critical issues facing the field of lupus and published the findings for review by all stakeholders.

Learn about the Phase I Results

Phase II Results

In Phase II, the Global Advisory Committee of lupus experts has established next steps for addressing top barriers in lupus in the areas of drug development, clinical care and access to care. The GAC defined success states by barrier and validated these themes to reflect patients’ perspectives through surveying more than 3,200 persons with lupus and caregivers across 83 countries. In Phase III of the project, the GAC will establish a task force to develop and implement chosen solutions.

Learn more about the Phase II Results

Phase III

In Phase III, three different implementation teams focused on Clinical Care, Access to Care, and Drug Development have been established to address barriers to improving care for people living with lupus. Solutions identified in Phase II have been further defined and implementation by members of the Global Advisory Committee is ongoing. The three different teams are comprised of physicians, scientists and people living with lupus from across the globe with different perspectives and a diversity of thought on the three pillar areas. Collectively, we are forging ahead to bring about real change for lupus patients in these three specific efforts.

Learn more about the Phase III Results

What are the ALPHA Project Objectives?
  • Identify knowledge gaps both in clinical care and research
  • Create consensus around the fundamental pillars that are missing in the field and stalling drug development and progress
  • Pave a path forward for more accurate and timelier diagnosis, greater access to care, and improved treatment options for people with lupus
  • Result in an actionable, documented, and published roadmap that is meaningful and useful to everyone in the field, no matter where they are in the world
Why is the ALPHA Project Important?

We know that the level and quality of data and research addressing issues related to lupus care, treatment, and healthcare access are not consistent across the global field. For example, there are differences in opinion when it comes to disease definition, treatment regiments, diagnostic criteria, and clinical trial design. The forum and opportunity to develop consensus around these issues had not existed.

This lack of consensus has led to a poor understanding about lupus, the inability to diagnose lupus in a timely fashion, especially by physicians with less experience in lupus, and a string of clinical trials of potential new treatments that failed to reach their primary endpoints and preventing them from being approved for use in treating lupus.

What Has the ALPHA Project Accomplished Thus Far?
  • Established a geographically and professionally diverse Global Advisory Committee (GAC) of lupus thought leaders to guide and oversee the study
  • Conducted in-depth interviews to obtain further opinions and detailed rationale for the most urgent barriers in the field and access the level of existing agreement across the lupus expert community
  • Conducted a global online survey of lupus experts focusing on the attitudes and perceptions about lupus and prioritization of the most pressing challenges to improve diagnosis, care, treatment and research
  • Analyzed the survey results to identify and prioritize the barriers as ranked by the survey participants
  • Global Advisory Committee has met and established next steps for addressing the identified barriers
  • Implementation working groups were established for the Clinical Care, Access to Care and Drug Development Pillars
  • A global meeting on clinical trial outcome measures was convened to discuss new and newly modified clinical trial outcome measures with a major focus on patient preference and needs for pediatric inclusivity
  • A series of meetings were convened to determine challenges related to time to diagnosis and steps required to define the lupus spectrum
What Primary Barriers Were Identified?

Lupus heterogeneity (diversity of the disease and the many manifestations or ways that it can impact the body) was identified as the primary barrier impeding the development of clinically meaningful treatments, the advancement of clinical care, and improvements to access and value. The study validated known challenges in lupus, identifying the five top barriers to improving outcomes in lupus:

  • Lack of diagnostic, predictive and prognostic biomarkers for lupus and deficiency of biomarkers to predict drug response in clinical trials;
  • Flawed clinical trial design;
  • Lack of access to clinicians familiar with lupus/limited awareness of lupus among non-expert medical professionals;
  • Barriers to the effective management of lupus due to social determinants of care in predominantly lower socioeconomic status areas;
  • And, lack of treatment adherence.
What Actions will be Taken to Address Each Barrier?
  • Drug development: Update current lupus outcome measures and issuing a declarative consensus statement on steroid-sparing drugs.
  • Clinical care: Lead the development of a consensus effort to define lupus. The new definition will build on current research definitions to include closely related immune-mediated inflammatory disorders, such as cutaneous variants. After establishing a consensus definition, it will be disseminated through publication and broader discussion.
  • Access to care: Spearhead an effort to gain a better understanding of social determinants of health and contributors to health disparities, and investigate the unique access to care issues faced by children with lupus.
  • Additional steps: Conduct an assessment of current biomarker development and data-sharing activities and identify gaps. The assessment will lead to the creation of standardized global data-sharing efforts and support international collective research collaborations.
What is the Next Step?

The ALPHA team will continue to engage stakeholders and support further research endeavors to implement solutions focused on accelerating drug development and improving access to high quality care. The Global Advisory Committee (GAC) clinical care and access to care teams will come together to focus on access to care barriers related to patient, provider and policy. The drug development team will continue to implement solutions focused on clinical trial outcome measures that are simplified but also elevate the patient voice. 

Who Serves on the Global Advisory Committee (GAC)?
  • Kathleen Arntsen | Lupus and Allied Diseases Association, U.S. and Person with Lupus
  • Sang-Cheol Bae, MD, PhD, MPH | Hanyang University, South Korea
  • Ian Bruce, MD, FRCP | University of Manchester, U.K.
  • Denesh Chitkara, MD | EMD Serono Research & Development Institute, Inc. 
  • Karen Costenbader, MD, MPH | Brigham and Women’s Hospital, U.S.
  • Brad Dickerson | Lupus and Allied Disease Association, U.S.
  • Thomas Dörner, MD | Charité University, Germany
  • Monique Gore-Massy | Person with Lupus
  • Ken Kalunian, MD | UC San Diego Health
  • Roger Abramino Levy, MD | GSK
  • Hetlena Johnson, M.ED | Person with Lupus
  • Sue Manzi, MD, MPH | Allegheny Health Network, U.S.
  • Eric Morand, MBBS (Hons), FRACP, PhD | Monash University, Australia
  • Sarah Peddicord | AstraZeneca
  • Sandra Raymond | Lupus Foundation of America, U.S.
  • Brad Rovin, MD, FACP, FASN | Ohio State University, U.S.
  • Tamar Rubinstein, MD, MS | Children's Hospital at Montefiore, U.S.
  • Laura Schanberg, MD | Kuke University, U.S.
  • Joan Von Feldt, MD, MSEd | Professor Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania
  • Victoria Werth, MD | University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia VAMC, U.S.
Who Are the ALPHA Project Sponsors?

The ALPHA Project was launched in partnership with founding partner EMD Serono Research & Development, Inc. (a business of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) and through additional support by GlaxoSmithKline.

The continued support and additional contributions of AstraZeneca and Lupus and Allied Diseases Association have made current Phase II efforts possible.

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The ALPHA Project is garnering widespread recognition and support for the valuable work it represents in advancing the field of lupus research and treatment.

Read the publications and articles

If you are interested in supporting the ALPHA Project, or if you would like to receive the ALPHA Newsletter, please contact Dr. Joy Buie at buie@lupus.org or Safoah Agyemang at Agyemang@lupus.org. 

The ALPHA Project research effort is momentous for the international lupus community; one that has never before been brought together for an initiative to address the most critical issues facing the field.
Kenneth A. Getz, MBA, Center for the Study of Drug Development at Tufts University School of Medicine
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