Frontiers in Medicine (Dec 2024)

Very low doses of rituximab in autoimmune hemolytic anemia—an open-label, phase II pilot trial

  • Miriam M. Moser,
  • Renate Thalhammer,
  • Christian Sillaber,
  • Ulla Derhaschnig,
  • Christa Firbas,
  • Ulrich Jäger,
  • Bernd Jilma,
  • Christian Schoergenhofer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2024.1481333
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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IntroductionAlthough rituximab is approved for several autoimmune diseases, no formal dose finding studies have been conducted. The amount of CD20+ cells differs significantly between autoimmune diseases and B-cell malignancies. Hence, dose requirements of anti-CD20 therapies may differ accordingly.MethodsWe conducted a phase II pilot trial investigating the effects and safety of very low doses of rituximab, i.e., 5 mg/m2 every 3 weeks, 20 mg every 4 weeks, 50 mg every 3 months (n = 3 each) and 100 mg every 3 months (n = 1) in patients with autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) to effectively suppress CD20+ cell counts. Doses were increased if circulating CD20+ cell depletion was insufficient (i.e., <95% reduction from baseline) in a dose group. Plasma rituximab concentrations were quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, CD20+ cell counts were determined by flow cytometry.ResultsTen patients were included in the final analysis (7 with cold agglutinin disease, 2 with warm AIHA, 1 with mixed-type AIHA). The first infusion depleted ≥95% of CD20+ cells in all but one of the included patients. However, the dosing regimens were found ineffective, because a sustained CD20+ cell depletion was not achieved, and CD20+ cells recovered with a high interindividual variability. CD20+ lymphocytes were below the detection limit if rituximab plasma concentrations exceeded 0.4 μg/mL. One endokarditis occured.ConclusionRituximab doses as low as 5 mg/m2 transiently depleted CD20+ cells in almost all patients, but the tested low-dose regimens failed to permanently suppress CD20+ cells. The empirically identified EC95% of 0.4 μg/mL rituximab may guide future studies using low-doses of rituximab.Clinical trial registrationhttps://clinicaltrials.gov/, identifier [EudraCT 2016-002478-11].

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