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Trial Title:
A Study on Fractionated Rituximab to Avoid Lysis Syndrome in Aggressive B-Lymphoma
NCT ID:
NCT05840289
Condition:
Aggressive B-Cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
Conditions: Official terms:
Lymphoma
Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin
Lymphoma, B-Cell
Aggression
Rituximab
Conditions: Keywords:
Aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma
tumor lysis syndrome
fractionated rituximab
prevention
Study type:
Observational
Overall status:
Active, not recruiting
Study design:
Time perspective:
Retrospective
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Other
Intervention name:
fractionated first dose rituximab
Description:
Patients at high-risk to develop tumor lysis syndrome received a initial fractionated
dose of rituximab over 2 or 3 days
Summary:
Tumour lysis syndrome (TLS) occurs as a consequence of the rapid destruction of malignant
cells, spontaneously and/or in response to cytotoxic agents and immunotherapies. TLS is a
feature of highly proliferative diseases with heavy tumor burden, such as high-grade
non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL, typically Burkitt's lymphoma). We evaluated fractionating
first rituximab dose to prevent TLS in a real-life B-cell NHL cohort of patients treated
at University Hospital of Geneva between 2010 and 2020.
Detailed description:
Tumour lysis syndrome (TLS) occurs as a consequence of the rapid destruction of malignant
cells, spontaneously and/or in response to cytotoxic agents and immunotherapies. TLS is a
feature of highly proliferative diseases with heavy tumor burden, such as acute
lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) and high-grade non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL, typically
Burkitt's lymphoma). TLS usually develop during the first week of treatment due to the
sudden release of intracellular ions, nucleic acids and protein metabolites. These
metabolic disturbances can manifest as hyperuricemia, hyperkaliemia, hyperphosphatemia,
hypocalcemia and uremia, exposing the patient to acute renal insufficiency, lactic
acidosis and ultimately death in the absence of appropriate management.
In order to make them more practical and reproducible, TLS criteria were modified in 2004
by Cairo and Bishop, who also developed a grading classification as: 1) biochemical TLS
occurring 3 days before to 7 days after the start of therapy, and 2) clinical TLS in case
of seizure, cardiac arrhythmia or significant acute renal injury (AKI). TLS is burdened
with significant morbidity and mortality.
Historically, TLS incidence among high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) patients was
reported in as high as 42% of cases, with 6% of clinically significant TLS. In a more
recent multicentric retrospective analysis performed on 722 patients (37% NHL, 36% ALL,
27% AML), 5.2 % of the patients developed TLS, and among them 25% required intensive care
unit admission with a relative mortality rate of 15%.
Rituximab (Mabthera®, Swissmedic 54378) is a therapeutic monoclonal antibody that binds
with high affinity to cells expressing the CD20 antigen found on the surface of malignant
and normal B cells, inducing complement-dependent and antibody-dependent cellular
cytotoxicity. Approved in 1997 for the treatment of CD20-positive B-cell low-grade NHL,
rituximab is now widely used in all the spectrum of B-cell malignancies. Initially
administered on a weekly schedule for a total of 4 to 8 infusions, rituximab is currently
infused together with other cytotoxic agents every 3 to 4 weeks. Rituximab may cause a
massive cytolysis of B-cells in some patients leading to an acute onset TLS. Notably, TLS
was reported as the second significant safety signal after rituximab administration in
1998.
Since the development of uricolytic agents (rasburicase), TLS incidence has significantly
been reduced. Nevertheless, early risk-stratification and initiation of a comprehensive
supportive care are mandatory in TLS. The mainstays of TLS prophylaxis and treatment
include hydration and diuresis, control of hyperuricaemia with xanthine oxidase
inhibitors blocking endogenous uric acid production from purine nucleotides (eg.
allopurinol) or uricolytic agents (rasburicase), and vigilant monitoring of electrolyte
abnormalities.
In addition, preemptive strategies of tumor debulking were developed such as steroids or
low-dose chemotherapy prophase or gradual dose ramp-up of the cytotoxic agent as
exemplified with the administration of the Bcl2 inhibitor Venetoclax in chronic
lymphocytic leukemia.
To prevent TLS, but also other side effects such as allergy and cytokine-release syndrome
during the first administration of rituximab, a few studies suggested the use of a
fractionated and dose ramp-up schedule of rituximab administration in B-cell
malignancies. In Geneva University Hospital (HUG), this strategy was widely applied to
most cases of patients having a B-cell malignancy at high-risk for TLS since the
publication of these pioneer studies. We aim at investigating the incidence and severity
of TLS in high-grade B-cell lymphoma patients treated at HUG over the last ten years.
Main objective To evaluate the incidence of biochemical lysis syndrome (LTLS) and
clinical lysis syndrome (CTLS) in patients receiving fractionated Rituximab infusion for
high-grade B-cell lymphoma.
Inclusion
• Newly diagnosed or relapsing histologically proven B-cell lymphoma patients treated
with fractionated Rituximab infusion, considered as ≥ 2 consecutive infusions, at least
24 hours apart
Exclusion
- Unproven histologically B-cell lymphoma
- Patients who receive a single day Rituximab infusion
- Patients under long-term dialysis before Rituximab started
- Age ≤ 18 years
- Absence of written informed consent
Criteria for eligibility:
Study pop:
histologically proven high-grade B-cell lymphoma patients
Sampling method:
Non-Probability Sample
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Newly diagnosed or relapsing histologically proven high-grade B-cell lymphoma
patients treated with fractionated Rituximab infusion, considered as ≥ 2 consecutive
infusions, at least 24 hours apart
Exclusion Criteria:
- Unproven histologically high-grade B-cell lymphoma
- Patients who receive a single day Rituximab infusion
- Patients under long-term dialysis before Rituximab started
- Age ≤ 18 years
- Absence of written informed consent
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
N/A
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
University Hospital Geneva
Address:
City:
Geneva
Zip:
1205
Country:
Switzerland
Start date:
August 24, 2020
Completion date:
May 1, 2023
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
University Hospital, Geneva
Agency class:
Other
Source:
University Hospital, Geneva
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05840289