| Literature DB >> 34054835 |
Vivien Hébert1,2, Maud Maho-Vaillant1,2, Marie-Laure Golinski1,2, Marie Petit1, Gaëtan Riou1, Olivier Boyer1, Philippe Musette3, Sébastien Calbo1, Pascal Joly1,2.
Abstract
The efficacy of the B-cell-depleting agent rituximab has been reported in immune diseases but relapses are frequent, suggesting the need for repeated infusions. The B-cell activating factor (BAFF) is an important factor for B cell survival, class switch recombination and selection of autoreactive B cells, as well as maintaining long-lived plasma cells. It has been hypothesized that relapses after rituximab might be due to the increase of serum BAFF levels. From the Ritux3 trial, we showed that baseline serum BAFF levels were higher in pemphigus patients than in healthy donors (308 ± 13 pg/mL versus 252 ± 28 pg/mL, p=0.037) and in patients with early relapse compared who didn't (368 ± 92 vs 297 ± 118 pg/mL, p=0.036). Rituximab and high doses of CS alone have different effects on the BAFF/BAFF-R axis. Rituximab led to an increase of BAFF levels associated to a decreased mRNA (Day 0: 12.3 ± 7.6 AU vs Month 36: 3.3 ± 4.3 AU, p=0.01) and mean fluorescence intensity of BAFF-R in non-autoreactive (Day 0: 3232 vs Month 36: 1527, mean difference: 1705, 95%CI: 624 to 2786; p=0.002) as well as on reappearing autoreactive DSG-specific B cells (Day 0: 3873 vs Month 36: 2688, mean difference: 1185, 95%CI: -380 to 2750; p=0.20). Starting high doses of corticosteroids allowed a transitory decrease of serum BAFF levels that re-increased after doses tapering whereas it did not modify BAFF-R expression in autoreactive and non-autoreactive B cells. Our results suggest that the activation of autoreactive B cells at the onset of pemphigus is likely to be related to the presence of high BAFF serum levels and that the decreased BAFF-R expression after rituximab might be responsible for the delayed generation of memory B cells, resulting in a rather long period of mild pemphigus activity after rituximab therapy. Conversely, the incomplete B cell depletion and persistent BAFF-R expression associated with high BAFF serum levels might explain the high number of relapses in patients treated with CS alone.Entities:
Keywords: BAFF - B-cell activating factor; BAFF-receptor; Corticosteroïd; Pemphigus; rituximab
Year: 2021 PMID: 34054835 PMCID: PMC8160507 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.666022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1(A) Comparison of serum BAFF levels between healthy donors and pemphigus patients at baseline. (B) Comparison of baseline serum BAFF levels between short-term relapsing patients and non-relapsing patients. Blue circles represent rituximab-treated patients. Red squares represent corticosteroids-treated patients. *p < 0.05.
Figure 2Evolution of serum BAFF levels and CD19+ B cells according to treatments: rituximab (blue curves) or corticosteroids (red curves). Mean percentages of CD19+ B cells among peripheral blood lymphocytes were measured by flow cytometry and are indicated in full lines. Mean serum BAFF levels were measured by ELISA and are indicated in dashed lines. Arrows correspond to rituximab infusions. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.
Figure 3Evolution of B-cells BAFF-R expression according to treatment by rituximab (A) or corticosteroids (B). (A) Evolution of the mean cytometric BAFF-R MFI expression in total B cells (black) and autoreactive DSG-specific B cells (grey) before (n = 22) and after rituximab (n = 11) and comparison to healthy donors (n = 4). (B) Evolution of the mean cytometric BAFF-R MFI expression in total B cells (black) and autoreactive DSG-specific B cells (grey) before (n = 22) and after corticosteroids (n = 11) and comparison to healthy donors (n = 4). *p < 0.05.