| Literature DB >> 34984113 |
Abstract
The pemphigoid group of subepidermal autoimmune blistering diseases can affect both cutaneous and mucosal tissues. Therapy of this group of diseases, including cicatricial pemphigoid (CP) and bullous pemphigoid (BP), consists of systemic steroids and immunomodulatory agents. Recalcitrant cases have typically been treated with plasmapheresis or rituximab individually. This report describes two patients with severe, rapidly progressive CP and BP refractory to high-dosage systemic steroids and immunomodulatory agents. Both patients were treated with a combination of plasmapheresis and rituximab. In addition to these cases, one retrospective study showed the effectiveness of other immunosuppressants in combination with plasmapheresis in 17 patients with pemphigus refractory to corticosteroids and immunosuppressants alone. No major adverse events occurred in the study. Similar studies employing immunoadsorption and rituximab with various combinations of intravenous immune globulin (IVIg), corticosteroids, and other conventional immunosuppressants have shown promising results in other autoimmune blistering diseases. The successful response in the patients described here, as well as those described in the literature who underwent similar management, provides a possible combination treatment option for patients with severe, recalcitrant pemphigoid. A further trial with a larger group of pemphigoid patients is warranted.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmune blistering diseases; bullous pemphigoid; cicatricial pemphigoid; plasma exchange; rituximab
Year: 2021 PMID: 34984113 PMCID: PMC8713951 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.19932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Studies employing immunoadsorption and rituximab with various combinations of IVIg, corticosteroids, and/or other conventional immunosuppressants.
| Case | Number of Patients | Treatment Protocol | Disease(s) | Initial Response | Adverse Effects | Clinical Outcome |
| Shimanovich et al. (2007) [ | 7 | Combination of protein A immunoadsorption (PAIA), rituximab and conventional immunosuppressants; intravenous immune globulin (IVIg) if refractory | Pemphigus vulgaris (n=5); Pemphigus foliaceus (n=2) | Rapid decline in circulating autoantibodies with improvement of mucosal and cutaneous lesions within four weeks (n=7) | Not reported | Long term remission (n=3); Partial improvement (n=1); Resistant to initial therapy but good response to IVIg (n=3) |
| Kasperkiewicz et al. (2012) [ | 23 | Immunoadsorption (IA) at initially three and later four-week intervals until lesions healed by 90%; 1000mg rituximab at weeks one and three; Intravenous dexamethasone pulses at first every three weeks then at increasing intervals in addition to daily azathioprine/mycophenolate mofetil | Severe Pemphigus | Rapid decline of circulating autoantibodies with improvement of pemphigus lesions in first weeks of therapy (n=23) | Severe, unspecified adverse events (n=2) | Complete remission (n=19); Minimal disease (n=1); Partial remission (n=3); Recurrence during long-term (mean 29 months) follow up (n=6) |
| Behzad et al. (2011) [ | 10 | Initially immunoadsorption (IA) at four-week intervals; Rituximab either twice at 1000 mg or four times at 375mg; Corticosteroids were tapered according to the individual clinical status (over 12-month period) | Difficult to treat pemphigus vulgaris | Complete remission (n=8); Partial response (n=1); Unresponsive (n=1); Results at six months after first IA treatment | Not reported | Complete remission (n=6); Stable disease (n=1); Relapse (n=1); Remaining 2 patients not reported; Results at 12 months after first IA treatment |
| Kolesnik et al. (2014) [ | 15 | Combination of protein A immunoadsorption (3-21 treatments) and rituximab (3-6 treatments); Additional low dose conventional immunosuppression | Pemphigus vulgaris (n=6); Bullous pemphigoid (n=3); Mucous membrane pemphigoid (n=3); Pemphigus foliaceus (n=2); Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (n=1) | Rapid clinical improvement within first four weeks and decline of circulating autoantibody levels | Minimal long-term adverse effects | Complete/partial remission rates of 88%/12% in pemphigus diseases; Complete/partial remission rates of 71%/29% in subepidermal blistering diseases; Overall relapse rate was 13% (mean follow-up of 22 months) |