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Rituximab
Therapy For The Induction Of Remission and Tolerance
In ANCA-Associated Vasculitis
Principal Investigators:
John
H. Stone,
Johns Hopkins University and Ulrich Specks,
Mayo Clinic
Abstract | Investigators
| Background
Abstract
Objectives
We will conduct a randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled trial of rituximab,
an anti-CD20 antibody, in ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV). The trial has two
major hypotheses:
1) B-cell depletion by rituximab induces stable remissions in AAV by re-establishing
B-cell tolerance to the ANCA target antigens.
2) Rituximab is as effective as the conventional treatment regimen for induction
and maintenance of disease remission, and offers substantial advantages over
standard therapy by virtue of its superior side-effect profile.
Rationale
Activated B-cells and autoantibodies to the target antigens proteinase or myeloperoxidase
(ANCA) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of AAV. ANCA are produced
by B-cells and/or plasma cells. Rituximab effectively eliminates B-cells
for 6-12 months. Without their B-cell precursors, short-lived plasma cells
disappear after about 2 weeks. Thus, rituximab can be used to suppress antibody
production and to disrupt other critical B-cell contributions to disease.
Treatment of AAV with rituximab should eliminate both the potentially pathogenic
B-cells and the disease-amplifying ANCA. Our preliminary data indicate rituximab
is effective in inducing stable remission of AAV and that B-cells returning
after such therapy are tolerant to the ANCA target antigens in at least two
thirds of patients.
Significance
Rituximab’s narrow spectrum of action
provides novel opportunities to study the role of tolerance
loss to the ANCA antigens in this disease. In
addition, by challenging existing paradigms about conventional treatment
(which is both toxic and unsuccessful in restoring tolerance),
the proposed trial
may may lead to a new standard regimen that is substantially safer.
Relevance to immune tolerance
Lessons from this trial and its mechanistic studies will vastly enhance our
understanding of the pathogenesis of AAV by determining the conditions under
which B-cell tolerance can be restored. The findings may have important implications
for many other autoimmune diseases.
Protocol summary To test our hypotheses,
we will perform a randomized, multi-center, double-masked,
placebo-controlled trial in patients with generalized
AAV. We
will randomize 194 patients to either: 1) conventional treatment (cyclophosphamide
and corticosteroids, followed by azathioprine); or 2) rituximab (plus corticosteroids,
initially) for remission induction. The primary clinical comparison will
be the ability of rituximab and corticosteroids
to induce disease remissions,
as measured by the cumulative disease activity at 6 months. Consistent with
the standard duration of treatment for AAV, patients in the conventional
therapy arm will receive cyclophosphamide for up
to 6 months followed by azathioprine,
to complete a total length of treatment of 18 months. In order to assess
the ability of rituximab to restore B-cell tolerance,
patients in both arms of
the trial will be followed for a total of 18 months.
Participating
Investigators

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John H. Stone, Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD |
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Peter Merkel, Boston
University, Boston, MA |
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Robert Speira,
Beth Israel, NYC, NY |
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John Davis, University
of California, San Francisco, CA |
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Cees Kallenberg
University of Groningen, The Netherlands |
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Ulrich Specks,
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN |
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Larry Moreland,
University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,
AL |
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E. William St.
Clair, Duke University, Durham, NC |
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Gary Hoffman, The
Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH |
Background
Articles

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Antineutrophil cytoplasmic
autoantibodies specific for myeloperoxidase cause
glomerulonephritis and vasculitis in mice - J
Clin Invest [PubMed
Central] |
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Differential B- and
T-cell activation in Wegener's granulomatosis -
J Allergy Clin Immunol [PubMed] |
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Clinical outcome in
22 patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with
B lymphocyte depletion - Ann Rheum Dis [PubMed] |
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