- Redfield, Robert R;
- Jordan, Stanley C;
- Busque, Stephan;
- Vincenti, Flavio;
- Woodle, E Steve;
- Desai, Niraj;
- Reed, Elaine F;
- Tremblay, Simon;
- Zachary, Andrea A;
- Vo, Ashley A;
- Formica, Richard;
- Schindler, Thomas;
- Tran, Ha;
- Looney, Caroline;
- Jamois, Candice;
- Green, Cherie;
- Morimoto, Alyssa;
- Rajwanshi, Richa;
- Schroeder, Aaron;
- Cascino, Matthew D;
- Brunetta, Paul;
- Borie, Dominic
The limited effectiveness of rituximab plus intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) in desensitization may be due to incomplete B cell depletion. Obinutuzumab is a type 2 anti-CD20 antibody that induces increased B cell depletion relative to rituximab and may therefore be more effective for desensitization. This open-label phase 1b study assessed the safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of obinutuzumab in highly sensitized patients with end-stage renal disease. Patients received 1 (day 1, n = 5) or 2 (days 1 and 15; n = 20) infusions of 1000-mg obinutuzumab followed by 2 doses of IVIG on days 22 and 43. Eleven patients received additional obinutuzumab doses at the time of transplant and/or at week 24. The median follow-up duration was 9.4 months. Obinutuzumab was well tolerated, and most adverse events were grade 1-2 in severity. There were 11 serious adverse events (SAEs) in 9 patients (36%); 10 of these SAEs were infections and 4 occurred after kidney transplant. Obinutuzumab plus IVIG resulted in profound peripheral B cell depletion and appeared to reduce B cells in retroperitoneal lymph nodes. Reductions in anti-HLA antibodies, number of unacceptable antigens, and the calculated panel reactive antibody score as centrally assessed using single-antigen bead assay were limited and not clinically meaningful for most patients (NCT02586051).