Truxima

Truxima

Generic Name

Truxima

Mechanism

  • Targeted binding: Recognizes the CD20 antigen on B‑cell surfaces.
  • Enhanced cytotoxicity: Glycoengineering increases affinity for FcγRIIIa receptors, amplifying antibody‑dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC).
  • Direct induction of apoptosis: Type‑II antibodies initiate non‑membrane‑lytic apoptosis pathways via direct cell‑surface interactions.
  • Complement‑dependent cytotoxicity (CDC): Truxima also activates the complement cascade, although CDC is less prominent than ADCC in its activity profile.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterTypical Value
AbsorptionIntravenous infusion
DistributionWide distribution in plasma and interstitial fluid; no significant partition into the CNS
MetabolismCatabolized into peptides and amino acids via proteolytic pathways
Elimination half‑life~60–70 hrs (≈2–3 days) after the first infusion; lengthens with cumulative dosing
Volume of distribution~5–6 L
ClearanceLinear elimination; increases with tumor burden

*Note:* Renal/hepatic impairment does not markedly alter pharmacokinetics; dose adjustment is not required.

Indications

  • Follicular lymphoma (FL): First‑line monotherapy or in combination with bendamustine (Br‑Truxima).
  • Chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL): Front‑line therapy with obinutuzumab + chlorambucil, or in relapsed disease.
  • B‑cell non‑Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL): As part of induction regimens for other subtypes.

Contraindications

  • Contraindications:
  • Known hypersensitivity to obinutuzumab, murine protein, or any excipient.
  • Active uncontrolled tuberculosis or serious infections.
  • Warnings:
  • Infusion reactions (fever, chills, rash, hypotension).
  • Infections (bacterial, viral, fungal) – heightened risk due to B‑cell depletion.
  • Neutropenia/labile blood counts – may predispose to opportunistic infections.
  • Re‑infusion reactions – mild, manageable with premedication; severe reactions are rare.

Dosing

1. Induction phase (Cycle 1):
• 100 mg IV over 90 min (Day 1).
• 900 mg IV over 120 min (Day 8).

2. Continuation phase (Cycles 2–4):
• 900 mg IV over 120 min (once a week).

3. Maintenance (post‑Cycle 4):
• 900 mg IV every 2 weeks for up to 12 months.

*Infusion precautions:*
• Premedicate with antihistamine (e.g., diphenhydramine) and acetaminophen; steroids optional for high‑risk patients.
• Start at 1 % of the total dose (1 mg / 90 min) and gradually increase if tolerated.

Adverse Effects

Common (≥ 10 %)Serious (≥ 1 %)
Infusion reactions (fever, chills, pruritus)Neutropenia (ANC < 500 / µL)
Rash (maculopapular, urticarial)Serious infections (sepsis, viral reactivation)
Cytopenias (anemia, thrombocytopenia)Opportunistic infections (CMV, fungal)
Diarrhea, nauseaHypersensitivity/anaphylaxis (rare)
Headache, fatigueCardiovascular events (rare)

Monitoring

  • Baseline: CBC with differential, liver/renal panels, electrolytes, hepatitis serology, TB screening.
  • During therapy:
  • CBC pre‑infusion → assess neutropenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia.
  • Monitor for signs of infection (fever, elevated CRP).
  • Check for infusion reactions: vitals, oxygen saturation.
  • Re‑check hepatitis B status after 6 months if HBsAg‑negative but anti‑HBc‑positive.

*Post‑treatment:*
• Repeat CBC and LFTs every 4–6 weeks; adjust supportive care accordingly.

Clinical Pearls

  • Infusion pacing is key: Start at 1 mg over 90 min, double every 30 min while symptoms remain mild; this reduces the severity of infusion reactions and often eliminates the need for steroids.
  • Premedication on subsequent infusions: A single dose of 100 mg IV diphenhydramine and 500 mg oral acetaminophen is usually sufficient; steroids are reserved for patients with prior severe reactions.
  • Use with caution in patients with impaired humoral immunity: Consider prophylactic antibiotics or antiviral agents (e.g., valganciclovir for CMV) in high‑risk individuals.
  • Dose‑based on B‑cell count? No; standard fixed dosing applies regardless of tumor burden.
  • Drug interactions: No significant CYP interactions; however, avoid crowding with rituximab or other anti‑CD20 antibodies concurrently unless protocol‑specified.
  • Br‑Truxima synergy: Adding bendamustine to Truxima improves progression‑free survival in FL but increases cytopenias; monitor CBC closely every cycle.
  • Follow‑up after therapy: Long‑term B‑cell depletion can last >6 months; schedule serologic immunoglobulin assessment and vaccinate for pneumococcus/Haemophilus influenzae after recovery of IgG levels.

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Reference‑friendly keywords: Truxima, obinutuzumab, CD20, antibody‑dependent cellular cytotoxicity, infusion reaction, follicular lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, bendamustine, cytopenia, monitoring.

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