Maria Bethke

and 10 more

Background Mature aggressive B-cell lymphoma are heterogenous malignancies that make up more than half of all diagnosed Non-Hodgkin lymphoma in children and adolescents. The overall survival rate increased over the last decades to 80–90%, due to fine tuning of polychemotherapy. However, new therapeutic implications are needed to further increase the overall survival. Current clinical trials analyze the therapeutic effect of rituximab in pediatric patients, while the mechanism of action in vivo is still not fully understood. Methods Effector molecules important for tumor defense were analyzed before and at day five after rituximab treatment via flow cytometry. Serum rituximab levels were measured with an ELISA. Results We evaluated patient parameters that may affect treatment response in relation to rituximab administration and serum rituximab levels. We indeed found a reduction of FcγRII levels after rituximab treatment in monocyte subtypes, while FcγRI expression was significantly increased, pointing to exhaustion of FcγRII mediated B cell depletion and compensation via FcγRI mediated trogocytosis. Serum levels of proinflammatory marker proteins S100A8/A9 and S100A12 significantly decreased after treatment to normal levels from an overall proinflammatory state before treatment. CD57, perforin and granzyme B expression decreased after treatment, probably due to exhaustion of NK cells. Conclusion The highlighted effects of rituximab treatment on patient’s immune response help understanding the biology behind tumor defense mechanisms and effector function. After subsequent studies, these novel insights might be translated into patient care and could contribute to improve treatment of pediatric patients with mature aggressive B-cell lymphoma.