Rituximab in the treatment of acquired factor VIII inhibitors

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Abstract

Autoantibodies against factor VIII (FVIII) are rare but can cause life-threatening bleeding requiring costly factor replacement and prolonged immunosuppression. We report 4 consecutively treated patients whose acquired FVIII inhibitors responded rapidly to immunosuppressive regimens that included rituximab, a monoclonal antibody against CD20+ B cells. Three patients had spontaneously occurring inhibitors. The fourth, a patient with mild hemophilia A, developed both an autoantibody and an alloantibody following recombinant FVIII treatment. Pretreatment FVIII activities ranged from less than 1% to 4% and inhibitor titers from 5 to 60 Bethesda units (BU). One patient with polymyalgia rheumatica who developed the inhibitor while receiving prednisone responded to single agent rituximab. The hemophilia patient had rapid resolution of the autoantibody, whereas the alloantibody persisted for months. Responses continue off treatment from more than 7 to more than 12 months. This report adds to the growing evidence that rituximab has efficacy in immune disorders resulting from auto-antibody formation. © 2002 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Wiestner, A., Cho, H. J., Asch, A. S., Michelis, M. A., Zeller, J. A., Peerschke, E. I. B., … Schlechter, G. P. (2002). Rituximab in the treatment of acquired factor VIII inhibitors. Blood, 100(9), 3426–3428. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2002-03-0765

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