Sunday, March 8, 2009

March 8, 2009 - The Treatment I Didn't Get

Today I run across a Reuters news article about rituximab (trade name, Rituxan), the monoclonal antibody drug I received along with my chemotherapy. It seems a research study has just demonstrated good results for “maintenance therapy” with Rituxan – in other words, continuing treatment with the drug over time, even after the cancer has gone into remission:

“An improved disease response was seen in 22% of rituximab-treated patients versus just 7% of control subjects....

Three-year progression-free survival was also higher in the rituximab group: 68% vs. 33% in controls. In the subgroup of 282 patients with follicular lymphoma, the corresponding rates were 64% and 33%. Higher overall survival rates were seen in the rituximab group as well, although the differences fell short of statistical significance....

‘Observations from this study inform the design of future studies and add to a substantial body of evidence that the combination of rituximab with chemotherapy is a new standard for patients with indolent lymphoma who require treatment,’ the authors conclude.”


At the time my R-CHOP chemotherapy ended (the “R” in R-CHOP stands for Rituxan), I was aware that some patients were continuing to receive monthly treatments with Rituxan for a year or more, as a preventative measure. This was, and continues to be, somewhat controversial. At several NHL patients’ conferences I attended, the medical experts making the speeches said the jury was still out on whether or not maintenance Rituxan does any good. With the tremendously high cost of this medication, many medical insurers had labeled it “experimental,” and were not funding its use in maintenance treatment. (I never took the matter up with my insurance people, because Dr. Lerner didn’t recommend maintenance Rituxan in my case.)

Well, now the jury has filed back into the courtroom and delivered their verdict: maintenance Rituxan does work – at least for indolent NHL patients who have had the CVP chemo regimen (cyclophosphamide, vincristine and prednisone). The researchers didn’t focus on patients who’ve had the CHOP chemo cocktail, rather than CVP – although, since vincristine and prednisone are two out of the four drugs in CHOP, I would think there’s a pretty good chance maintenance Rituxan would have improved my long-term prognosis, as well.

This raises a lot of unanswered – and probably unanswerable – questions for me. Chief among them is, if I had received maintenance Rituxan, would my remission have lasted longer than it did?

Hindsight, as they say, is 20/20. I’m not going to run off and ask Dr. Lerner about maintenance Rituxan now, but it does give me something to think about. Maybe I'll ask him what he thinks of this article, next time I see him...