Ema
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That makes sense (kind of, lol!).@Ema I believe I would still make antibodies b/c I asked my doctor (pre-Ritux) if I needed to be revaccinated for anything post-Ritux and he said absolutely 100% no. He said the vaccines are in the memory cells (this is from memory and not his words) and they are untouched by Ritux so I assume the antibody response would be similar?
This article seems to support that, bolding mine:
Rituximab binds CD20, a 33–35 kDa nonglycosylated protein expressed on the surface of B-cells. CD20 appears at the pre-B-cell stage in the bone marrow; it persists through B-cell life cycle and is lost during final maturation to plasma cells. The exact role of CD20 is largely unknown, but recent data indicate that it could play an important role in Ca2+ influx across membranes promoting activation of B-cells [Cartron et al., 2004].
Because CD-20 is not present in the antibody-producing plasma cells the level of serum immunoglobulin is not expected to change after rituximab infusion.