# Venetoclax-Based Regimens in CLL: Immunoglobulin G Levels, Absolute Neutrophil Counts, and Infectious Complications

**Authors:** Wojciech Szlasa, Monika Kisielewska, Anna Sobczyńska-Konefał, Emilia Jaskuła, Monika Mordak-Domagała, Jacek Kwiatkowski, Katarzyna Tatara, Agnieszka Kuś, Mateusz Sawicki, Izabela Dereń-Wagemann, Mariola Sędzimirska, Ugo Giordano, Jarosław Dybko

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines13071609 · 2025-06-30

## TL;DR

This study compares how two venetoclax-based treatments affect immune markers and infection risk in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

## Contribution

The study highlights differences in immune recovery between first-line and second-line venetoclax-based regimens in CLL.

## Key findings

- First-line VenO therapy significantly improved absolute neutrophil counts.
- Second-line VenR therapy showed limited impact on neutrophil counts and a decline in IgG levels.
- Prior treatment history may hinder immune recovery in second-line VenR patients.

## Abstract

Background: Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a prevalent hematologic malignancy that predominantly affects elderly individuals, posing significant clinical challenges due to patient comorbidities and inherent resistance to conventional chemotherapy. The emergence of targeted therapies combining venetoclax, a selective inhibitor of the anti-apoptotic protein BCL-2, with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies has dramatically transformed the treatment landscape. Methods: This retrospective observational study analyzed the differential impacts of first-line venetoclax-obinutuzumab (VenO) and second-line venetoclax-rituximab (VenR) on immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels and absolute neutrophil count (ANC) in CLL patients. Results: Our findings indicate that during first-line VenO therapy, a significant improvement in ANC levels from baseline was observed, whereas patients undergoing second-line VenR therapy demonstrated limited impact on ANC and the decreasing tendency in IgG levels. Patients treated with VenR had a longer disease history and previous exposure to other treatment regimens, primarily chemoimmunotherapy, which could negatively influence immune recovery, making direct comparisons between these two treatment lines challenging. Although this observational study did not directly compare infection rates, the observed enhancement of ANC levels in patients receiving VenO suggests a potential for lower infection risk compared to pretreated VenR patients. Conclusions: These results underscore the clinical significance of considering both the treatment line and the patient’s prior therapeutic history when selecting venetoclax-based regimens for CLL. The potential association of first-line VenO with improved immunological parameters and the complex impact of prior therapies on immunological recovery with second-line VenR warrant further prospective investigation into the correlation between treatment regimen, patient history, immune function, and infectious complications.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** BCL2 (BCL2 apoptosis regulator)
- **Chemicals:** venetoclax (PubChem CID 49846579)
- **Diseases:** chronic lymphocytic leukemia (MONDO:0004948)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** BCL2 (BCL2 apoptosis regulator) [NCBI Gene 596] {aka Bcl-2, PPP1R50}, KRT20 (keratin 20) [NCBI Gene 54474] {aka CD20, CK-20, CK20, K20, KRT21}
- **Diseases:** hematologic malignancy (MESH:D019337), Infectious Complications (MESH:D003141), infection (MESH:D007239), CLL (MESH:D015451)
- **Chemicals:** VenO (-), rituximab (MESH:D000069283), Venetoclax (MESH:C579720), obinutuzumab (MESH:C543332)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12292417/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12292417