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      Prophylactic rituximab after allogeneic transplantation decreases B-cell alloimmunity with low chronic GVHD incidence.

      Blood
      Adult, Aged, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived, administration & dosage, pharmacology, Autoimmunity, drug effects, B-Lymphocytes, immunology, Chemoprevention, methods, Chronic Disease, Drug Administration Schedule, Feasibility Studies, Female, Graft vs Host Disease, epidemiology, prevention & control, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, adverse effects, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents, Incidence, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell, therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Transplantation Conditioning, Transplantation, Homologous, Young Adult

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          Abstract

          B cells are involved in the pathogenesis of chronic GVHD (cGVHD). We hypothesized that prophylactic anti-B-cell therapy delivered 2 months after transplantation would decrease allogeneic donor B-cell immunity and possibly the incidence of cGVHD. Therefore, in the present study, patients with high-risk chronic lymphocytic leukemia (n = 22) and mantle-cell lymphoma (n = 13) received a total lymphoid irradiation of 80 cGy for 10 days and antithymocyte globulin 1.5 mg/kg/d for 5 days. Rituximab (375 mg/m(2)) was infused weekly on days 56, 63, 70, and 77 after transplantation. The incidence of acute GVHD was 6%. The cumulative incidence of cGVHD was 20%. Nonrelapse mortality was 3%. Rituximab treatment after allogeneic transplantation significantly reduced B-cell allogeneic immunity, with complete prevention of alloreactive H-Y Ab development in male patients with female donors (P = .01). Overall survival and freedom from progression at 4 years for chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients were 73% and 47%, respectively; for mantle-cell lymphoma patients, they were 69% and 53%, respectively.

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