Summary:
Rituximab is a chimeric monoclonal antibody anti-CD20. CD20 receptor is expressed on cells of many
B-lymphoproliferative diseases and is constantly presented on cells of follicular lymphoma. The
effective mechanism is antibody- (ADCC) and complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC). There is also
evidence of direct induction of apoptosis and inhibition of proliferation. The usual dosage of rituximab
is 4x375mg/m2 in slow infusion, applied in weekly intervals. A synergism of rituximab with many
cytostatics was demonstrated in vitro and also confirmed in clinical studies. Rituximab toxicity is very
low and manifests usually with a moderate allergic reaction in the course of administration of the first
infusion. In monotherapy, rituximab leads in relapsing and resistent patients with follicular lymphoma
to 46-48 % of overall response (OR) and 2-6 % complete remission (CR), whereas in primary treatment,
up to 70 % OR and 20 % CR have been reported. Immunochemotherapy (rituximab combination
with chemotherapy) is even more efficient. The CHOP/rituximab regime reached 95-100 % OR and
54-58 % CR, corresponding results have been described even after combinations of fludarabin regime
with rituximab. Rituximab was also administered in combination with different cytokines. The efficiency
of rituximab with IFNα was between 45-71 % OR, combination of rituximab with IL-2, IL-12 and
G-CSF reached around 67-69 % OR. Rituximab is used as an efficient method of purging in vivo before
collection of peripheral stem cells and in maintenance therapy after autologous transplantation of
peripheral stem cells.
Key words:
rituximab, mabthera, monoclonal antibodies, follicular lymphoma
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