Journal article

Retreatment with rituximab based on a treatment-to-target approach provides better disease control than treatment as needed in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a retrospective pooled analysis


Authors listEmery, Paul; Mease, Philip J.; Rubbert-Roth, Andrea; Curtis, Jeffrey R.; Mueller-Ladner, Ulf; Gaylis, Norman B.; Williams, Sarah; Reynard, Mark; Tyrrell, Helen

Publication year2011

Pages2223-2232

JournalRheumatology

Volume number50

Issue number12

ISSN1462-0324

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ker253

PublisherOxford University Press


Abstract

Methods. Four hundred and ninety-three RA patients with an inadequate response to MTX recruited into rituximab Phase II/III studies received further courses of open-label rituximab based on two approaches: (i) treatment to target (TT): patients assessed 24 weeks after each course and retreated if not in remission [DAS in 28 joints based on ESR (DAS-28-ESR) epsilon 2.6]; (ii) treatment as needed (PRN): patients retreated at the physician's discretion epsilon 24 weeks following the first course and epsilon 16 weeks following further courses, if both swollen and tender joint counts were epsilon 8. All courses consisted of i.v. rituximab 2 x 1000 mg 2 weeks apart plus MTX. Observed data were analysed according to treatment strategy.

Results. Multiple courses of rituximab maintained or improved responses irrespective of regimen. TT provided tighter control of disease activity with significantly greater improvements in DAS-28-ESR and lower HAQ-disability index scores vs PRN. TT resulted in significantly more patients achieving major clinical response. PRN resulted in recurrence of disease symptoms between courses, with TT significantly reducing the incidence of RA flares. Despite more frequent retreatment with TT compared with PRN, the rates of serious adverse events and serious infections were comparable between regimens.

Conclusions. Retreatment with rituximab based on 24-week evaluations and to a target of DAS-28-ESR remission leads to improved efficacy and tighter control of disease activity compared with PRN without a compromised safety profile. TT may be the preferable rituximab treatment regimen for patients with RA.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleEmery, P., Mease, P., Rubbert-Roth, A., Curtis, J., Mueller-Ladner, U., Gaylis, N., et al. (2011) Retreatment with rituximab based on a treatment-to-target approach provides better disease control than treatment as needed in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a retrospective pooled analysis, Rheumatology, 50(12), pp. 2223-2232. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ker253

APA Citation styleEmery, P., Mease, P., Rubbert-Roth, A., Curtis, J., Mueller-Ladner, U., Gaylis, N., Williams, S., Reynard, M., & Tyrrell, H. (2011). Retreatment with rituximab based on a treatment-to-target approach provides better disease control than treatment as needed in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a retrospective pooled analysis. Rheumatology. 50(12), 2223-2232. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ker253



Keywords


CLINICAL-TRIALSCONTROLLED-TRIALDOUBLE-BLINDMethotrexate-inadequate responderRECOMMENDATIONSRETREATMENTRITUXIMABTASK-FORCETIGHT CONTROLTreatment as neededtreatment strategyTreatment to target

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:02