Abstract

Corticosteroids as initial therapy for primary immune thrombocytopenia achieve a low rate of sustained remission. We prospectively evaluated the efficacy, safety, and response duration of low-dose rituximab plus high-dose dexamethasone as frontline therapy in newly diagnosed primary immune thrombocytopenia patients. One cycle of dexamethasone, 40 mg/d/intravenously for four consecutive days, plus weekly intravenous rituximab, 100 mg for four doses, was delivered. Twenty-one consecutive adults were enrolled. The overall response at day +28 was 90.5%. Complete sustained response at 6 months and relapse rate were 76.2% and 15.8%, respectively, compared with 30% and 62.5% for a historical group who had received standard treatment with prednisone (P = 0.005 and P = 0.004). There was a 9.5% incidence of adverse effects. The combination of low-dose rituximab and high-dose dexamethasone as frontline therapy for adults with primary immune thrombocytopenia was effective and had a high overall response rate and a low incidence of relapse.

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