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. 2026 Apr 22;19(Suppl 1):8. doi: 10.17161/kjm.vol19.25372

Tocilizumab: From Bench to Bedside - A Comprehensive Review

Alexandre Khoury 1, Laura El Halabi 1, Anthony Al Bayeh 1, Marcel Katrib 1, Janane Nasr 1, Pavan Reddy 1
PMCID: PMC13171021  PMID: 42137382

Abstract

Introduction

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a key mediator of inflammation and cancer biology. Tocilizumab, an IL-6 receptor blocker, is used to treat autoimmune diseases and has become essential in managing cytokine release syndrome (CRS) associated with CAR-T cell therapy and bispecific antibodies. However, global access to tocilizumab, as well as the cost and uptake of its biosimilars, remains uneven. This review summarizes evidence across three major areas: clinical uses and safety, oncologic and CRS-related applications, and global access and biosimilars.

Methods

Using a PRISMA-ScR approach, we mapped published studies, clinical data, and economic reports. We included evidence on tocilizumab’s approved and emerging indications; its role in CRS related to immunotherapies; and access, pricing, and biosimilar availability across regions.

Results

Tocilizumab continues to demonstrate reliable anti-inflammatory effects in rheumatoid arthritis, giant cell arteritis, and COVID-19, with a consistent safety profile that includes infections, cytopenias, and elevated liver enzymes or lipid levels. In oncology, it is the standard treatment for moderate to severe CRS associated with CAR-T therapy and is increasingly used with bispecific antibodies. Early or prophylactic use may reduce hospitalization without compromising anticancer efficacy. Preclinical and early clinical data also suggest IL-6 blockade may improve responses to immunotherapy, although this remains exploratory. Global access varies widely: FDA- and EMA-approved biosimilars have lowered costs in high-income regions, while affordability and availability remain major barriers in low- and middle-income countries.

Conclusions

Tocilizumab now spans autoimmune care, supportive oncology, and early investigational cancer applications. Improving biosimilar access, clarifying CRS management strategies, and expanding high-quality oncologic trials are important next steps.


Articles from Kansas Journal of Medicine are provided here courtesy of University of Kansas Medical Center

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