Increased T Cell Proliferative Responses to Islet Antigens Identify Clinical Responders to Anti-CD20 Monoclonal Antibody (Rituximab) Therapy in Type 1 Diabetes

Publication Description
Type 1 diabetes mellitus is believed to be due to the autoimmune destruction of β-cells by T lymphocytes, but a single course of rituximab, a monoclonal anti-CD20 B lymphocyte Ab, can attenuate C-peptide loss over the first year of disease. The effects of B cell depletion on disease-associated T cell responses have not been studied. We compare changes in lymphocyte subsets, T cell proliferative responses to disease-associated target Ags, and C-peptide levels of participants who did (responders) or did not (nonresponders) show signs of β-cell preservation 1 y after rituximab therapy in a placebo-controlled TrialNet trial. Rituximab decreased B lymphocyte levels after four weekly doses of mAb. T cell proliferative responses to diabetes-associated Ags were present at baseline in 75% of anti-CD20- and 82% of placebo-treated subjects and were not different over time. However, in rituximab-treated subjects with significant C-peptide preservation at 6 mo (58%), the proliferative responses to diabetes-associated total (p = 0.032), islet-specific (p = 0.048), and neuronal autoantigens (p = 0.005) increased over the 12-mo observation period. This relationship was not seen in placebo-treated patients. We conclude that in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus, anti-B cell mAb causes increased proliferative responses to diabetes Ags and attenuated β-cell loss. The way in which these responses affect the disease course remains unknown.

Primary Author
Herold,Kevan C.
Pescovitz,Mark D.
McGee,Paula
Krause-Steinrauf,Heidi
Spain,Lisa M.
Bourcier,Kasia
Asare,Adam
Liu,Zhugong
Lachin,John M.
Dosch,H. Michael

Volume
187

Issue
4

Start Page
1998

Other Pages
2005

URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21775681

PMID
21775681

PMCID
PMC3150302



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)

Publication Year
2011

Publication Date
Aug 15,

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
0022-1767

Document Object Index
10.4049/jimmunol.1100539