Author:
Leissinger Cindy,Josephson Cassandra,Konkle Barbara,Kruse-Jarres Rebecca,Ragni Margaret,Journeycake Janna,Valentino Leonard,Key Nigel,Gill Joan,McCrae Keith,Neufeld Ellis,Manno Catherine,Raffini Leslie,Saxena Kapil,Torres Marcela,Marder Victor,Bennett Carolyn,Assmann Susan,Granger Suzanne
Abstract
SummaryThe development of antibodies against infused factor VIII (FVIII) in patients with haemophilia A is a serious complication leading to poorly controlled bleeding and increased morbidity. No treatment has been proven to reduce high titre antibodies in patients who fail immune tolerance induction or are not candidates for it. The Rituximab for the Treatment of Inhibitors in Congenital Hemophilia A (RICH) study was a phase II trial to assess whether rituximab can reduce anamnestic FVIII antibody (inhibitor) titres. Male subjects with severe congenital haemophilia A and an inhibitor titre ≥5 Bethesda Units/ml (BU) following a FVIII challenge infusion received rituximab 375 mg/m2 weekly for weeks 1 through 4. Post-rituximab inhibitor titres were measured monthly from week 6 through week 22 to assess treatment response. Of 16 subjects who received at least one dose of rituximab, three (18.8%) met the criteria for a major response, defined as a fall in inhibitor titre to <5 BU, persisting after FVIII re-challenge. One subject had a minor response, defined as a fall in inhibitor titre to <5 BU, increasing to 5–10 BU after FVIII re-challenge, but <50% of the original peak inhibitor titre. Rituximab is useful in lowering inhibitor levels in patients, but its effect as a solo treatment strategy is modest. Future studies are indicated to determine the role of rituximab as an adjunctive therapy in immune tolerisation strategies.Trial: “Rituximab for the Treatment of Inhibitors in Congenital Hemophilia A: The RICH Study. Registered as Clinical Trials.gov identifier- NCT00331006.
Funder
New England Research Institutes
Case Western Reserve University
Children’s Hospital Boston
Emory University
Tulane
University of North Carolina
University of Oklahoma
University of Pennsylvania
University of Pittsburgh
Blood Center of Wisconsin
Cited by
40 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献