Patients on Rituximab Not Properly Screened for HBV
Less than half of patients treated with rituximab for hematologic or oncologic (hem/onc) purposes are screened for hepatitis B virus (HBV) prior to or shortly after therapy initiation, according to a study presented at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting (Atlanta; Dec. 8 to 11). Low pretreatment screening rates demonstrate the need for continued efforts to implement evidence-based HBV screening and prophylaxis guidelines in clinical practice, the researchers say. The researchers from UMass Memorial Medical Center (Worcester, Mass.) retrospectively analyzed data (2005 to 2011) from 103 hem/onc patients over the age of 17 years who received the monoclonal antibody rituximab (45 percent had diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 15 percent had other high-grade lymphoma, 14 percent had follicular lymphoma, and 26 percent had another hematologic malignancy). The researchers found that a total of 53 (51.4 percent) were screened for HBV at any point before or during treatment. Only 6.8 percent of patients were screened prior to initiation of treatment and 18.4 percent had HBV screening within 30 days of the first rituximab dose. The median time to screening in patients screened for HBV after 30 days was 196 days after rituximab initiation. Year of therapy did not affect rates of […]
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