In this retrospective observational study on patients with RRMS or CIS, we evaluated the effects on inflammatory disease activity after discontinuation and dose reduction (to a mean of < 1000 mg yearly) of rituximab treatment. The results indicate that rituximab has long-term effects on inflammatory disease activity and that disease reactivation is rare in previously rituximab treated RRMS and CIS patients who discontinued treatment. Our study also implies that a low-dose maintenance treatment protocol may be sufficient for RRMS and CIS patients with stable disease.
Patients who had transitioned to SPMS within 12 months from starting rituximab were excluded from this study as clinicians tend to be cautious and frequently diagnose SPMS retrospectively after a period of diagnostic uncertainty, resulting in a delay of SPMS diagnosis by up to 3 years [14].
A high proportion of patients had a heavy T2 lesion burden and CEL(s) at baseline which suggests that our study population was inflammatory active at inclusion. Our results confirm a low ARR and a low risk for new lesions on MRI during treatment with rituximab, in line with previous studies [6,7,8,9,10,11, 13]. The two patients with CEL(s) on MRI after dose reduction or discontinuation both discontinued treatment within the frame of a clinical study and had only received two rituximab infusions (1000 mg i.v. days 1 and 15 according to study protocol) before stopping treatment [13]. In the standard clinical setting at the University Hospital of Umeå these patients would have continued full-dose treatment for at least 3 years before considering dose reduction, provided a well-tolerated treatment and a stable disease course. There is unfortunately no clear definition of “stable disease course”; however as a rule of thumb patients without signs of clinical or radiological disease activity (i.e. no relapses, stable EDSS, no new or contrast enhancing lesions on yearly MRIs) during the last 3 years are considered for dose reduction. During the 400 patient years on low-dose treatment in this study, the frequency of disease breakthrough was low which indicates that treatment with a low-dose protocol (i.e. < 1000 mg yearly) is sufficient to maintain suppression of inflammatory disease activity in patients with RRMS and CIS with stable disease.
Pregnancy is one of the most common reasons for discontinuing rituximab [9, 15] and since the late 1990s, it is well known that there are fewer MS relapses during pregnancy, especially in the later trimesters, and that the risk of relapse increases in the early postpartum period, especially in women with active disease before pregnancy [16]. However, in a more recent study on a contemporary MS cohort with patients diagnosed earlier due to new diagnostic criteria, no increased disease activity was seen postpartum [17]. As for MS drugs with shorter effect duration than rituximab the risk management during washout periods before conception needs to be addressed, since these are associated with a risk of rebound disease activity [18,19,20]. Our findings of a large proportion of patients without any sign of disease reactivation after discontinuation of rituximab suggests that inflammatory disease activity stays suppressed long after cessation of treatment. These findings corroborate the notion that part of the effect of B-cell depleting drugs is mediated through memory B-cell depletion [21,22,23]. This long-term disease suppression seems to be able to mitigate the increased risk of disease activity associated with a pregnancy for women with highly active disease, making B-cell depletion an attractive treatment option in fertile females [24].
In the natural history of MS, the inflammatory activity is at its highest early in the disease and generally decreases with age and disease duration [2, 3]. Younger age and higher disease activity are also associated with larger relative treatment benefits [5]. These observations, together with the results of the current study, suggest that full-dose treatment with rituximab at disease onset with gradual tapering of treatment intensity may be a successful treatment strategy with retained suppression of disease activity.
A few patients had a very short observation time on low- and super-low dose which results in a misleading dispersion of the yearly rituximab dose (Table 2). The frequency of MRI scans with gadolinium contrast during low-dose and super-low-dose treatment was lower compared with during full-dose treatment. This is explained by the fact that the MRI follow-up protocol in Sweden stipulates that after approximately 3 years of stable disease without signs of disease activity gadolinium is no longer routinely administered. The main limitation of this study is its inherent shortcomings based on its retrospective, non-randomized design. Larger randomized studies are needed to gain higher levels evidence regarding optimal rituximab doses, treatment intervals, and treatment duration in RRMS patients. The short observation time after dose reduction and discontinuation in the current study prevents conclusions regarding longer term effects of disease activity. The ongoing prospective randomized phase 3 study RIDOSE-MS, comparing a 12-month dosing interval of 500 mg rituximab with a 6-month dosing interval, may potentially provide data which allow more firm conclusions to be drawn [25].