Table of Contents
- Trial overview
- Who was studied
- Study designs and phases
- What was measured
- Trial details
- Key points for patients
Trial overview
The available trials are studying Atrasentan Hydrochloride in people with IgA nephropathy, also called IgAN, which is a kidney disease that can lead to protein in the urine and loss of kidney function.[1][2]
One study was a Phase 2 trial in people with IgA nephropathy who were taking an SGLT2 inhibitor, and the other was a Phase 3 study in patients with IgA nephropathy at risk of progressive loss of renal function.[1][2]
Who was studied
The Phase 2 study focused on people with IgA nephropathy who were already taking dapagliflozin, which is listed in the trial data as an SGLT2 inhibitor.[1]
The Phase 3 study included patients with IgA nephropathy who were at risk of progressive loss of kidney function, meaning their disease could get worse over time.[2]
These trials were not broad kidney disease studies; they were focused on a specific kidney condition and a defined patient group.[1][2]
Study designs and phases
The Phase 2 study was an interventional trial, which means researchers gave a study treatment and then measured the results.[1]
The Phase 3 study was also interventional and was described as randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled.[2]
Randomized means treatment groups were assigned by chance, double-blind means neither the participants nor the study team knew who got which treatment, and placebo-controlled means the study compared Atrasentan Hydrochloride with a look-alike treatment that did not contain the active study drug.[2]
The Phase 3 study also included an open-label extension to further characterize safety, which means some participants could continue in a follow-up part of the study where the treatment is known and longer-term safety can be studied.[2]
What was measured
Both trials mainly measured proteinuria, which means the amount of protein in the urine.[1][2]
The studies used urine protein:creatinine ratio, or UPCR, from a 24-hour urine collection to track change from the start of the study to later time points.[1][2]
In the Phase 2 study, the main outcome was the change from baseline to Week 12.[1]
In the Phase 3 study, the main outcome was the change from baseline to Week 36 in the non-SGLT2i stratum, which means the group analyzed did not include patients on an SGLT2 inhibitor in that specific analysis.[2]
Trial details
NCT05834738 was a Phase 2 study that enrolled 54 people and was completed.[1]
This study compared Atrasentan Hydrochloride with matching placebo while participants were on background SGLT2 inhibitor therapy, and the summary says it was designed to evaluate efficacy versus placebo.[1]
NCT04573478, also called the ALIGN Study, was a Phase 3 trial with 404 participants and was authorised.[2]
This study compared Atrasentan Hydrochloride with placebo in patients with IgA nephropathy at risk of progressive loss of renal function, and it also included an open-label extension for more safety information.[2]
Key points for patients
These trials are looking at whether Atrasentan Hydrochloride can help lower protein loss in the urine in people with IgA nephropathy.[1][2]
The studies are designed to compare the study drug with placebo so researchers can see whether any change is linked to the treatment and not to chance alone.[1][2]
Across the available data, the focus is on kidney outcomes and safety, with one smaller Phase 2 study and one larger Phase 3 study providing the main evidence base.[1][2]



