Rituximab was the first antibody to be approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of malignancy. It is a chimeric antibody which binds strongly to the CD20 antigen found on normal mature B cells as well as on tumour cells in nearly all B cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas.
Monotherapy
Low-grade lymphoma is a chronic illness usually requiring intermittent, but long-term, treatment to control disease symptoms. The listing of rituximab on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme has expanded the range of therapeutic options for patients with low-grade lymphoma whose disease is not responsive to alkylating agents. The evidence supporting the use of rituximab was provided by an open label single arm phase III study. In the 151 evaluable patients who had previously received chemotherapy nine had complete responses and 67 had partial responses.3
Treatment with rituximab involves four infusions given at weekly intervals. A number of patients have received further courses of therapy with good effect.
Most patients experience fever, chills and rigors within two hours of commencing the first infusion. The incidence of infusion-related symptoms decreases to 40% with subsequent infusions. Approximately 10% of patients develop serious symptoms including immediate hypotension, bronchospasm and rarely a late onset cytokine release syndrome characterised by severe dyspnoea and hypoxia up to two days after the infusion. Rituximab binds to normal B cells which are the precursors of the immunoglobulin producing plasma cells. Serum immunoglobulin levels can fall after treatment, however this is not usually clinically significant.
In terms of relative therapeutic effect rituximab appears to offer comparable efficacy, but with less toxicity than intensive combination chemotherapy or drugs such as fludarabine. The optimal schedule of administration remains a key unresolved issue. Rituximab is detectable for three to six months following a single course of therapy so it is possible that infrequent single doses may provide maximum therapeutic effectiveness.
Combination therapy
About 30% of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma have diffuse large B cell lymphoma, and more than half of these patients are over 60 years old. For about 25 years the standard treatment for this form of lymphoma has been a regimen of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone (CHOP) given every three weeks for six months. Over the years more complicated combinations have been tried, but none have improved on the 30-40% cure rate observed with CHOP. The results of combination therapy with rituximab and CHOP have therefore sparked considerable interest.
The addition of rituximab to CHOP significantly improved the complete remission rate (75% versus 63%) and overall survival at two years (70.2% versus 57.3%) in patients aged between 60 and 80 years.4Importantly, these gains were made without apparent increase in overall toxicity.
The apparent success with combination therapy cannot yet be applied to all patients with lymphoma. Lymphoma is a heterogenous disease and the responses to treatment are clearly dependent upon a number of factors including the exact type of lymphoma and the age of the patient. For instance, there are currently no data supporting any role for the combination of rituximab and chemotherapy in people under 60 years old.
The cost of treatment needs consideration. One cycle of treatment with rituximab-CHOP costs approximately $4000 compared with $500 for CHOP alone. Another consideration is the new data which show that increasing the frequency of CHOP to fortnightly produces comparable improvements, in overall survival and complete remission rates, to those seen with rituximab-CHOP. Given these findings, and the cost of rituximab, it will be important to establish the optimal number of infusions, as well as the specific sub-group of patients for whom this drug is truly beneficial.