Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology

Abstract Comparable clinical efficacy and safety of the reference rituximab (MABTHERA) and its biosimilars has been established in randomized trials. However, safety concerns are often raised when switching from reference to biosimilar products and between different biosimilars. In this prospective...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Silvana A. M. Urru, Stefania Spila Alegiani, Anna Guella, Giuseppe Traversa, Annalisa Campomori
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-03-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-85563-1
id doaj-68f49def5d11436693923505682f41e0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-68f49def5d11436693923505682f41e02021-03-21T12:34:25ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-03-011111510.1038/s41598-021-85563-1Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematologySilvana A. M. Urru0Stefania Spila Alegiani1Anna Guella2Giuseppe Traversa3Annalisa Campomori4Hospital Pharmacy Unit, Trento General Hospital, Autonomous Province of TrentoPharmacoepidemiology Unit, National Center for Drug Research and Evaluation, Italian National Institute of HealthHematology Unit, Trento General Hospital, Autonomous Province of TrentoPharmacoepidemiology Unit, National Center for Drug Research and Evaluation, Italian National Institute of HealthHospital Pharmacy Unit, Trento General Hospital, Autonomous Province of TrentoAbstract Comparable clinical efficacy and safety of the reference rituximab (MABTHERA) and its biosimilars has been established in randomized trials. However, safety concerns are often raised when switching from reference to biosimilar products and between different biosimilars. In this prospective observational study we aimed at evaluating the safety of switching between reference and biosimilar rituximab (TRUXIMA and RIXATHON) at Trento General Hospital (Italy). All patients (n = 83) with Non Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL, n = 72) and Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL, n = 11) who received rituximab between March 2018 and March 2019 were asked to take part in the study. In 2017 and 2018 two tenders were carried out and two different biosimilars became available in the hospital, these were used sequentially. Thus, patients with or without previous treatments with the originator rituximab either received a biosimilar or were switched between different biosimilars. The incidence of adverse events in these groups of patients is described. The study population received 465 rituximab infusions and all received biosimilars. Fifty patients (60%) experienced at least one switch between different biosimilars or between rituximab originator and biosimilar, whereas 33 (40%) received one of the two biosimilars and one patient received reference rituximab. Adverse events (n = 146) were reported in 71 patients (84.5%). Treatment-related grade 3–4 events were reported in 5 patients (5.9%), whereas grade 1 rituximab related infusion events were observed in 6 patients (7.1%). No safety signal emerged in association with the use of a specific biosimilar nor with the practice of switching. Adverse events were similar, in terms of seriousness and frequency, to those described in the literature, providing further support to the clinical safety of rituximab biosimilars.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-85563-1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silvana A. M. Urru
Stefania Spila Alegiani
Anna Guella
Giuseppe Traversa
Annalisa Campomori
spellingShingle Silvana A. M. Urru
Stefania Spila Alegiani
Anna Guella
Giuseppe Traversa
Annalisa Campomori
Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology
Scientific Reports
author_facet Silvana A. M. Urru
Stefania Spila Alegiani
Anna Guella
Giuseppe Traversa
Annalisa Campomori
author_sort Silvana A. M. Urru
title Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology
title_short Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology
title_full Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology
title_fullStr Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology
title_full_unstemmed Safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology
title_sort safety of switching between rituximab biosimilars in onco-hematology
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Comparable clinical efficacy and safety of the reference rituximab (MABTHERA) and its biosimilars has been established in randomized trials. However, safety concerns are often raised when switching from reference to biosimilar products and between different biosimilars. In this prospective observational study we aimed at evaluating the safety of switching between reference and biosimilar rituximab (TRUXIMA and RIXATHON) at Trento General Hospital (Italy). All patients (n = 83) with Non Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL, n = 72) and Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL, n = 11) who received rituximab between March 2018 and March 2019 were asked to take part in the study. In 2017 and 2018 two tenders were carried out and two different biosimilars became available in the hospital, these were used sequentially. Thus, patients with or without previous treatments with the originator rituximab either received a biosimilar or were switched between different biosimilars. The incidence of adverse events in these groups of patients is described. The study population received 465 rituximab infusions and all received biosimilars. Fifty patients (60%) experienced at least one switch between different biosimilars or between rituximab originator and biosimilar, whereas 33 (40%) received one of the two biosimilars and one patient received reference rituximab. Adverse events (n = 146) were reported in 71 patients (84.5%). Treatment-related grade 3–4 events were reported in 5 patients (5.9%), whereas grade 1 rituximab related infusion events were observed in 6 patients (7.1%). No safety signal emerged in association with the use of a specific biosimilar nor with the practice of switching. Adverse events were similar, in terms of seriousness and frequency, to those described in the literature, providing further support to the clinical safety of rituximab biosimilars.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-85563-1
work_keys_str_mv AT silvanaamurru safetyofswitchingbetweenrituximabbiosimilarsinoncohematology
AT stefaniaspilaalegiani safetyofswitchingbetweenrituximabbiosimilarsinoncohematology
AT annaguella safetyofswitchingbetweenrituximabbiosimilarsinoncohematology
AT giuseppetraversa safetyofswitchingbetweenrituximabbiosimilarsinoncohematology
AT annalisacampomori safetyofswitchingbetweenrituximabbiosimilarsinoncohematology
_version_ 1724210413017497600