ORLANDO-Patients with
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
(CLL) complicated by autoimmune
hemolytic anemia (AIHA) usually
improve following treatment with
high-dose steroids but have few options
if such treatment fails.
In a poster presented at the 43rd
Annual Meeting of the American
Society of Hematology (abstract
1529), Kanti R. Rai, MD, reported
long-term follow-up data on eight
such patients suggesting that a rituximab(Drug information on rituximab) (Rituxan), cyclophosphamide(Drug information on cyclophosphamide), dexamethasone(Drug information on dexamethasone) combination
regimen is effective not only as initial
salvage therapy in such patients
but also as retreatment for relapse.
Dr. Rai said that up to 30% of
CLL patients with AIHA either do
not respond to conventional steroid
regimens or relapse and have a poor
response to steroid retreatment.
Coombs positivity and AIHA are
both well-recognized complications
of CLL, Dr. Rai said. AIHA arises as
a consequence of the destruction of
red blood cells mediated by
autoreactive antibodies. The means
by which these autoreactive antibodies
arise is as yet unknown, but
it is postulated that the imbalance
of lymphocyte subsets in CLL patients
leads to this complication.
Corticosteroids and intravenous
immunoglobulin are the standard
treatment for AIHA. Rituximab is
active in CLL, Dr. Rai said, "so using
rituximab in a patient with CLL
complicated by AIHA could have
two potential benefits by eradicating
the neoplastic CLL cells as well
as achieving control of AIHA."
Based on that assumption, Dr.
Rai, Niraj Gupta, MD, and their colleagues
at Long Island Jewish Medical
Center, New Hyde Park, New
York, studied rituximab, cyclophosphamide,
and dexamethasone in
eight CLL patients with AIHA refractory
to steroids, intravenous
gamma-globulin, or immunosuppressants.
Patients were given rituximab
375 mg/m2 IV on day 1; cyclophosphamide
750 to 1,000 mg/m2 IV on
day 2; and dexamethasone 12 mg/d
IV on days 1 and 2 and orally on
days 3 to 7. Cycles were repeated
monthly. Blood products were given
only to patients with symptomatic
anemia or thrombocytopenia.
The researchers reported last year
that all eight patients had an excellent
response to this regimen. Hemoglobin
levels improved from a pretreatment
median of 8.3 g/dL to 13.5
g/dL, and Coombs test converted to
negative in five patients after initial
treatment. Duration of initial response
was 13 months, ranging from
7 to more than 23 months.
Five of the eight patients subsequently
relapsed, and in this poster
Dr. Rai reported that all five responded
to retreatment with the rituximab
combination (see Table). Hemoglobin
improved from a pretreatment
median of 8 g/dL to a post-treatment
median of 13.4 g/dL. One patient became
Coombs negative after
retreatment. "All 5 patients remain
in response after a median of over 7
months," Dr. Rai said.
Toxicity included grade 4 neutropenia
in one patient, but most
of the side effects were related to
the first rituximab infusion. No
dose modifications were required,
and no opportunistic infections
were observed.
The second remissions of AIHA
followed a median of two cycles of the
combination therapy. Dr. Rai said that
the improvement in hemoglobin was
evident after the first cycle. Median
duration of response to retreatment is
7+ months (range, 3 to 9+ months).
One patient had a second relapse after
3 months and died 3 months later of
progressive CLL.
Dr. Rai also provided follow-up
on the three patients of the original
eight who were not retreated: Two
of these continue in remission at
22+ and 23+ months, and one died
of progressive CLL 16 months after
the initial response to the combination
therapy.
These results demonstrate that
this regimen is highly effective in
controlling AIHA of CLL in patients
who relapsed after an initial response
achieved earlier with the
same regimen, he said.
"Such a high success rate was
not possible to achieve with any of
the previously used therapies for recurrent
AIHA of CLL. Only two
cycles were required to achieve the
maximum response on retreatment,
the toxicity profile is acceptable, and
we think that rituximab deserves
exploration in the treatment of this
and other autoimmune hematological
disorders," Dr. Rai said.
"There has been a trend recently
to give rituximab either in very high
doses weekly or more often than
once a week. However, these findings
clearly indicate that the standard
375 mg/m2 dose is quite effective
when given as infrequently as
once a month when combined with
other agents such as cyclophosphamide
and dexamethasone," Dr. Rai
concluded.
