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Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia

Rituximab hypersensitivity reactions are rare but are one of the main causes of rituximab elimination from antilymphoma immunochemotherapy treatments. While the clinical picture may be indistinguishable from other infusion-related reactions, hypersensitivity reactions (HSR) do not disappear and inst...

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Autores principales: Novelli, S., Soto, L., Caballero, A., Moreno, M. E., Lara, M. J., Bayo, D., Quintas, A., Jimeno, P., Zamora, M. I., Bigorra, T., Sierra, J., Briones, J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7305539/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32577119
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/4231561
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author Novelli, S.
Soto, L.
Caballero, A.
Moreno, M. E.
Lara, M. J.
Bayo, D.
Quintas, A.
Jimeno, P.
Zamora, M. I.
Bigorra, T.
Sierra, J.
Briones, J.
author_facet Novelli, S.
Soto, L.
Caballero, A.
Moreno, M. E.
Lara, M. J.
Bayo, D.
Quintas, A.
Jimeno, P.
Zamora, M. I.
Bigorra, T.
Sierra, J.
Briones, J.
author_sort Novelli, S.
collection PubMed
description Rituximab hypersensitivity reactions are rare but are one of the main causes of rituximab elimination from antilymphoma immunochemotherapy treatments. While the clinical picture may be indistinguishable from other infusion-related reactions, hypersensitivity reactions (HSR) do not disappear and instead become more intense with subsequent administrations. Objective. To describe the use of the 12-step protocol for desensitization to intravenous rituximab in clinical practice and the complementary study of a possible IgE-mediated HSR in the context of B-cell lymphoma treatment. Methods. A 12-step rituximab desensitization protocol was performed prospectively within clinical practice in 10 patients with a history of severe infusion reactions or in patients who had a repeated reaction at subsequent doses despite taking more intense preventive measures. Skin prick tests were performed at the time of reaction and at a later time to eliminate false negatives due to possible drug interference. Results. Overall, with the desensitization protocol, 70% of patients were able to complete the scheduled immunochemotherapy. Two patients had to discontinue the therapy due to clinical persistence and the third due to lymphoma progression. Intradermal tests with 0.1% rituximab were positive in only 20% of cases, demonstrating a mechanism of hypersensitivity. Conclusions. The 12-step desensitization protocol is very effective and assumable within healthcare practice. There is a need to determine the mechanism underlying the infusion reaction in a large proportion of cases due to the risk of future drug exposure.
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spelling pubmed-73055392020-06-22 Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia Novelli, S. Soto, L. Caballero, A. Moreno, M. E. Lara, M. J. Bayo, D. Quintas, A. Jimeno, P. Zamora, M. I. Bigorra, T. Sierra, J. Briones, J. Adv Hematol Clinical Study Rituximab hypersensitivity reactions are rare but are one of the main causes of rituximab elimination from antilymphoma immunochemotherapy treatments. While the clinical picture may be indistinguishable from other infusion-related reactions, hypersensitivity reactions (HSR) do not disappear and instead become more intense with subsequent administrations. Objective. To describe the use of the 12-step protocol for desensitization to intravenous rituximab in clinical practice and the complementary study of a possible IgE-mediated HSR in the context of B-cell lymphoma treatment. Methods. A 12-step rituximab desensitization protocol was performed prospectively within clinical practice in 10 patients with a history of severe infusion reactions or in patients who had a repeated reaction at subsequent doses despite taking more intense preventive measures. Skin prick tests were performed at the time of reaction and at a later time to eliminate false negatives due to possible drug interference. Results. Overall, with the desensitization protocol, 70% of patients were able to complete the scheduled immunochemotherapy. Two patients had to discontinue the therapy due to clinical persistence and the third due to lymphoma progression. Intradermal tests with 0.1% rituximab were positive in only 20% of cases, demonstrating a mechanism of hypersensitivity. Conclusions. The 12-step desensitization protocol is very effective and assumable within healthcare practice. There is a need to determine the mechanism underlying the infusion reaction in a large proportion of cases due to the risk of future drug exposure. Hindawi 2020-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7305539/ /pubmed/32577119 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/4231561 Text en Copyright © 2020 S. Novelli et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Study
Novelli, S.
Soto, L.
Caballero, A.
Moreno, M. E.
Lara, M. J.
Bayo, D.
Quintas, A.
Jimeno, P.
Zamora, M. I.
Bigorra, T.
Sierra, J.
Briones, J.
Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia
title Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia
title_full Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia
title_fullStr Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia
title_short Assessment of Confirmed Clinical Hypersensitivity to Rituximab in Patients Affected with B-Cell Neoplasia
title_sort assessment of confirmed clinical hypersensitivity to rituximab in patients affected with b-cell neoplasia
topic Clinical Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7305539/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32577119
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/4231561
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