Primary Outcome Measures:
- To assess the safety and tolerability of Rituximab in the treatment of CFE. Adverse and serious adverse events during the study period, reasonably or probably related to Rituximab, will be assessed at each study visit up to 12 months. [ Time Frame: 12 months ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
- The natural history of CFE is a progressive deterioration in cortical function; therefore, any evidence of stabilization or improvement in measures of motor function, cognition and/or seizure frequency will be evidence of efficacy and will be assessed at [ Time Frame: 12 months ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
Secondary Outcome Measures:
- The percentage of patients with a 50% reduction in seizure frequency (responder rate) at 6 months post treatment (as compared to the patient's baseline seizure frequency) will be determined. [ Time Frame: 12 months ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
Chronic Focal Encephalitis (Rasmussen's Encephalitis) is a condition characterized by a progressive hemiparesis, cognitive decline (including loss of language skills if the language dominant hemisphere is involved) and epileptic seizures that are typically refractory to medical treatment (Rasmussen). Attempts to control the seizures with anticonvulsants are ineffective and the only effective treatment to date is a hemispherectomy (surgical removal of half of the brain). Children with CFE who undergo cortical resections or hemispherectomies demonstrate an inflammatory histopathology consisting of perivascular lymphocytic cuffing, gliosis, neuronal loss, microglial nodules and later laminar necrosis and spongy degeneration
Rituximab is a genetically engineered, chimeric; murine/human monoclonal antibody directed against the CD20 antigen found on the surface of normal and malignant pre-B and mature B cells. It was approved by the FDA in 1997 for the treatment of relapsed or refractory low grade or follicular, CD20+, B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Rituximab binds specifically to the CD20 antigen expressed on the surface of both normal and malignant pre-B and mature B cells. In vitro mechanism of action studies have demonstrated that the Fc portion of Rituximab binds human complement and can lead to cell lysis of the targeted cell through complement-dependent cytotoxicity. Additionally, it has been demonstrated that Rituximab has significant activity in assays of antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (Reff et al. 1994). More recently, Rituximab has been shown to induce apoptosis in vitro in DHL-4, a human B cell lymphoma line (Maloney et al. 1997). The relative extent to which these individual mechanisms account for the observed depletion of normal and malignant B cells in vivo is unknown.
While CFE represents only a very small percentage of patients with epilepsy, the devastating progressive nature of the disease with out any adequate treatments, relegates these children to the relentless loss of cognitive and motor skills, and continuing seizures. Recent evidence suggests this condition is immune mediated and includes the development of antibodies directed against various brain components including glutamate receptors (GluR3) (Rogers). Brain samples from patients with CFE have demonstrated immunoreactivity for IgG, C4 C8, and MAC (Andrews and Whitney) and involvement of both B and T-lymphocytes. Evidence supporting a role for clonally expanded B lymphocytes was found by Baranzini . By analyzing the T-cell receptor expression in brain lesions using PCR these investigators also demonstrated the local immune response in CFE included restricted T-cell populations probably expanding from a few precursor T-cells responding to discrete antigenic epitopes (Li). Following demonstration of antibodies directed against brain elements in CFE, a patient was treated with plasma exchange which produced a significant improvement in seizure frequency, cognition and hemiparesis, lending support to the hypothesis that circulating antibodies contribute to the disease pathogenesis. Subsequently attempts to modify this disease by immune modification (plasmaphoresis, steroids, gamma globulin) have demonstrated modest improvements but the improvements have been short-lived and have not affected the natural progression of this disease. This pilot study proposes to directly attack the cells (B-cells) thought to be instrumental in the development of this condition. Should this approach to treating CFE be successful it will have a major impact on these children's lives.