Johnson T Wong1, Aidan Long2. 1. Allergy & Immunology Unit, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass. Electronic address: jwong1@partners.org. 2. Allergy & Immunology Unit, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rituximab (Rituxan) hypersensitivity (RITS) can be severe and limits the ability to further administer the treatment. Understanding its pattern and desensitization may permit administration in difficult cases. OBJECTIVE: Analyze RITS patient characteristics, hypersensitivity pattern, and desensitization outcomes to optimize management. METHODS: Twenty-five patients with RITS were referred to the Allergy/Immunology Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital over 5 1/2 years. Their clinical reaction patterns were analyzed. Drug desensitizations were performed using 3 related continuous intravenous protocols that were chosen on the basis of clinical history, skin test reactivity, and the patient's previous desensitization outcomes. RESULTS: Of the 25 referred patients, 23 had lymphoma of various types. The 25 patients underwent 170 continuous intravenous desensitizations based on 3 related protocols, with most based on the intermediate protocol. All but 2 desensitizations were completed successfully. Overall 24% of the desensitizations were complicated by hypersensitivity reactions. Two patients with serum sickness and a patient with mast cell disorder were also successfully managed. The average hypersensitivity reaction grade was 3.0 (2-4) before desensitization and 0.41 with desensitization. Skin tests were performed in 18 patients, with 5 patients positive initially and 2 more converted from negative to positive. Skin test status was not helpful for risk stratification for hypersensitivity reactions. Tryptase level was elevated during 21% of desensitizations with reactions but rare among asymptomatic desensitizations. CONCLUSIONS: Nearly all patients with severe sensitivity to rituximab can be successfully desensitized. IgE-mediated mechanism and mast cell degranulation, in addition to cytokine release syndrome and tumor lysis syndrome, may contribute to a significant portion of hypersensitivity reactions among patients with RITS.
BACKGROUND:Rituximab (Rituxan) hypersensitivity (RITS) can be severe and limits the ability to further administer the treatment. Understanding its pattern and desensitization may permit administration in difficult cases. OBJECTIVE: Analyze RITSpatient characteristics, hypersensitivity pattern, and desensitization outcomes to optimize management. METHODS: Twenty-five patients with RITS were referred to the Allergy/Immunology Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital over 5 1/2 years. Their clinical reaction patterns were analyzed. Drug desensitizations were performed using 3 related continuous intravenous protocols that were chosen on the basis of clinical history, skin test reactivity, and the patient's previous desensitization outcomes. RESULTS: Of the 25 referred patients, 23 had lymphoma of various types. The 25 patients underwent 170 continuous intravenous desensitizations based on 3 related protocols, with most based on the intermediate protocol. All but 2 desensitizations were completed successfully. Overall 24% of the desensitizations were complicated by hypersensitivity reactions. Two patients with serum sickness and a patient with mast cell disorder were also successfully managed. The average hypersensitivity reaction grade was 3.0 (2-4) before desensitization and 0.41 with desensitization. Skin tests were performed in 18 patients, with 5 patients positive initially and 2 more converted from negative to positive. Skin test status was not helpful for risk stratification for hypersensitivity reactions. Tryptase level was elevated during 21% of desensitizations with reactions but rare among asymptomatic desensitizations. CONCLUSIONS: Nearly all patients with severe sensitivity to rituximab can be successfully desensitized. IgE-mediated mechanism and mast cell degranulation, in addition to cytokine release syndrome and tumor lysis syndrome, may contribute to a significant portion of hypersensitivity reactions among patients with RITS.
Authors: S Novelli; L Soto; A Caballero; M E Moreno; M J Lara; D Bayo; A Quintas; P Jimeno; M I Zamora; T Bigorra; J Sierra; J Briones Journal: Adv Hematol Date: 2020-06-11
Authors: Lisha Li; Lianglu Wang; Kai Guan; Jun Liu; Daobin Zhou; Yanbin Zhang; Yan Zhang Journal: Cancer Manag Res Date: 2021-12-22 Impact factor: 3.989