Long-Term Maintenance Therapy Using Rituximab-Induced Continuous B-Cell Depletion in Patients with ANCA Vasculitis |
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Authors: | William F. Pendergraft III Frank B. Cortazar Julia Wenger Andrew P. Murphy Eugene P. Rhee Karen A. Laliberte John L. Niles |
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Affiliation: | *Joint Nephrology Fellowship Program, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; and;†Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine.;‡Vasculitis and Glomerulonephritis Clinic, Division of Nephrology, and;§Categorical Internal Medicine Residency Program, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts |
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Abstract: |
Background and objectivesRemission in the majority of ANCA vasculitis patients is not sustained after a single course of rituximab, and risk of relapse warrants development of a successful strategy to ensure durable remission.Design, setting, participants, & measurementsA retrospective analysis of ANCA vasculitis patients who underwent maintenance therapy using rituximab-induced continuous B-cell depletion for up to 7 years was performed. Maintenance therapy with rituximab was initiated after achieving remission or converting from other prior maintenance therapy. Continuous B-cell depletion was achieved in all patients by scheduled rituximab administration every 4 months. Disease activity, serologic parameters, adverse events, and survival were examined.ResultsIn the study, 172 patients (mean age=60 years, 55% women, 57% myeloperoxidase–ANCA) treated from April of 2006 to March of 2013 underwent continuous B-cell depletion with rituximab. Median remission maintenance follow-up time was 2.1 years. Complete remission (Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score [BVAS]=0) was achieved in all patients. Major relapse (BVAS≥3) occurred in 5% of patients and was associated with weaning of other immunosuppression drugs. Remission was reinduced in all patients. Survival mirrored survival of a general age-, sex-, and ethnicity-matched United States population.ConclusionThis analysis provides evidence for long-term disease control using continuous B-cell depletion. This treatment strategy in ANCA vasculitis patients also seems to result in survival rates comparable with rates in a matched reference population. These findings suggest that prospective remission maintenance treatment trials using continuous B-cell depletion are warranted. |
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