After CAR-T infusion, patients need up to 15 years of follow-up (FDA REMS). First year: monthly visits with blood tests, imaging, and organ function monitoring. Month 1–2 requires 4-week proximity to infusion center (US) or 2-week flexible proximity (China). Most critical risks: CRS (81.8% incidence), neurotoxicity (33.2%), low IgG (<200 mg/dL = IVIG needed), and infection (ANC <500 = immediate hospitalization).

China follow-up costs $50-$150/visit (70-85% cheaper than US $300-$800/visit) with 70% telemedicine vs US 40%. This protocol provides a month-by-month guide with exact tests, physicians needed, red flags, and downloadable tools for patients and physicians.

Part 1: The Core Problem

CAR-T follow-up is not like standard cancer treatment. It requires long-term monitoring (up to 15 years), shared care between central + local physician, and active toxicity management (CRS, neurotoxicity, hypogammaglobulinemia). Most follow-up plans fail because they don't address these three challenges.

1

Challenge 1: Long-Term Toxicity Risk

FDA requires 15-year follow-up after CAR-T to monitor for secondary malignancies, late CRS, and immunoglobulin decline. China monitors for 10 years, US for 15 years. This is a critical gap for international patients.

2

Challenge 2: Immune Reconstitution Timeline

CAR-T destroys B-cells, leading to low IgG, IgA, IgM. Immune reconstitution takes 6-12 months. During this time, patients need IVIG if IgG <200 mg/dL, prophylactic antibiotics if infections >2/year, and vaccination delay until month 3-6.

3

Challenge 3: Shared Care Coordination

Central physician (China/US) does infusion, first 4 weeks, initial response. Local physician (home hospital) does month 6-12, immunizations, long-term monitoring. These two must coordinate via shared care plan, telemedicine, and record transfer.

Part 2: Month-by-Month Follow-Up Protocol

This protocol covers the critical first 12 months after CAR-T infusion, with specific tests, frequencies, and red flags for each period. Beyond 12 months, patients transition to yearly monitoring up to 15 years (FDA REMS).

MONTH 1-2

Immediate Post-Infusion (Weekly Visits)

Most critical period: CRS risk, neurotoxicity monitoring, immune suppression
Test Frequency Purpose Critical Threshold
CBC (ANC, ALC) Weekly Infection risk ANC <500 = hospitalize
IgG, IgA, IgM Weekly Hypogammaglobulinemia IgG <200 = IVIG
TSH, T3, T4 Weekly Thyroid function TSH >10 = treatment
PET/CT Month 1 Response assessment MRD-negative = CR
Neurologic exam Weekly Neurotoxicity Confusion = neurologist
Cardiac echo If CRS Cardiac function EF <50 = cardiologist
Key Actions
  • Week 1-2: Drive restriction (2 weeks FDA, 8 weeks some centers)
  • Week 1-4: Proximity to infusion center (4 weeks US, 2 weeks flexible China)
  • Month 1: Tocilizumab if CRS grade ≥2 (fever >38°C, hypoxia)
  • Month 1: IVIG if IgG <200 mg/dL
  • Month 1: Prophylactic antibiotics if ANC <500
Red Flags
  • Fever >38°C → immediate hospitalization
  • Hypoxia (SpO2 <92%) → oxygen + tocilizumab
  • Confusion/seizure → neurologist consult
  • ANC <500 → infection prevention + antibiotics
Signal Score: 5/5 (FDA REMS guideline, mature, universal)
MONTH 3-4

Response Assessment (Monthly Visits)

Transition from weekly to monthly, first vaccinations, immune reconstitution monitoring
Test Frequency Purpose Critical Threshold
CBC (ANC, ALC) Monthly Infection risk ANC <500 = hospitalize
IgG, IgA, IgM Monthly Hypogammaglobulinemia IgG <200 = IVIG
Flow cytometry (B/T) Monthly Immune reconstitution B-subset <10% = monitor
PET/CT Month 3 Response assessment MRD-negative = CR
CT chest/abdomen If PR Disease progression New lesions = re-treat
FSH/LH, Testosterone Month 3 Hormone function Low = endocrinologist
Key Actions
  • Month 3: First influenza/pneumococcal/Covid-19 vaccine (if stable)
  • Month 3: Discontinue driving restriction (if no neurotoxicity)
  • Month 3: Transition from weekly to monthly visits
  • Month 4: Hepatitis B DNA, HBsAg (infectious disease screen)
Red Flags
  • New PET/CT lesions → disease progression
  • IgG still <200 → continue IVIG
  • FSH/LH low → endocrinology consult
Signal Score: 4/5 (Real clinical efficacy, BC Cancer guideline)
MONTH 5-6

Immunoglobulin + Vaccination Check (Monthly Visits)

Second vaccine series, hepatitis B vaccine, dental assessment, transition to quarterly
Test Frequency Purpose Critical Threshold
CBC (ANC, ALC) Monthly Infection risk ANC <500 = hospitalize
IgG, IgA, IgM Monthly Hypogammaglobulinemia IgG <200 = IVIG
Flow cytometry (B/T) Monthly Immune reconstitution B-subset <10% = monitor
PET/CT Month 6 Response assessment MRD-negative = CR
TSH, T3, T4 Month 6 Thyroid function TSH >10 = treatment
Dental assessment Month 6 Dental health Cavities = dentist
Key Actions
  • Month 5-6: Second vaccine series (influenza, pneumococcal, covid)
  • Month 6: Hepatitis B vaccine (if HBsAg negative)
  • Month 6: Discontinue prophylactic antibiotics (if no infections)
  • Month 6: Transition from monthly to quarterly visits
Red Flags
  • IgG low + infections → IVIG + antibiotics
  • Dental cavities → dentist (infection risk)
  • TSH high → endocrinology
Signal Score: 4/5 (Real clinical efficacy, FDA REMS)
MONTH 7-9

Long-Term Toxicity Monitoring (Quarterly Visits)

Quarterly visits, third PET/CT, begin annual monitoring if stable, telemedicine 70% (China)
Test Frequency Purpose Critical Threshold
CBC (ANC, ALC) Quarterly Infection risk ANC <500 = hospitalize
IgG, IgA, IgM Quarterly Hypogammaglobulinemia IgG <200 = IVIG
PET/CT Month 9 Response assessment MRD-negative = CR
CT chest/abdomen If PR Disease progression New lesions = re-treat
TSH, T3, T4 Quarterly Thyroid function TSH >10 = treatment
FSH/LH, Testosterone Quarterly Hormone function Low = endocrinologist
Key Actions
  • Month 7-9: Quarterly visits (not monthly)
  • Month 9: Third PET/CT (if MRD-negative)
  • Month 9: Begin annual monitoring (if stable)
  • Month 9: Telemedicine 70% (China) vs 40% (US)
Red Flags
  • New lesions on CT → disease progression
  • IgG low + infections → IVIG
  • Hormone low → endocrinology
Signal Score: 3/5 (Early clinical signal, reproducible)
MONTH 10-12

Transition to Community Care (Quarterly Visits)

Transition to local oncology, final PET/CT of year 1, annual monitoring plan, shared care plan finalized
Test Frequency Purpose Critical Threshold
CBC (ANC, ALC) Quarterly Infection risk ANC <500 = hospitalize
IgG, IgA, IgM Quarterly Hypogammaglobulinemia IgG <200 = IVIG
PET/CT Month 12 Response assessment MRD-negative = CR
CT chest/abdomen If PR Disease progression New lesions = re-treat
TSH, T3, T4 Quarterly Thyroid function TSH >10 = treatment
FSH/LH, Testosterone Quarterly Hormone function Low = endocrinologist
Key Actions
  • Month 10-12: Transition to local oncology (community care)
  • Month 12: Final PET/CT of year 1 (if MRD-negative = CR)
  • Month 12: Annual monitoring plan (year 2-5 quarterly, year 6-15 yearly)
  • Month 12: Shared care plan finalized (central + local physician)
Red Flags
  • MRD-positive → re-treatment consideration
  • IgG low → continue IVIG
  • New CT lesions → progression
Signal Score: 4/5 (Real clinical efficacy, BC Cancer)
YEAR 2-15

Beyond 12 Months: Yearly Monitoring (up to 15 Years)

FDA REMS long-term follow-up: secondary malignancy monitoring, late toxicity, immune function
Time Period Frequency Tests Purpose
Year 2-5 Quarterly CBC, IgG, PET/CT Disease + immune monitoring
Year 6-10 Yearly CBC, IgG, CT Long-term toxicity (China stops at 10 years)
Year 11-15 Yearly CBC, IgG, CT Long-term toxicity (US only, FDA REMS)
Key Actions
  • Year 2-5: Quarterly visits (same as month 10-12)
  • Year 6-10: Yearly visits (China stops at 10 years)
  • Year 11-15: Yearly visits (US continues to 15 years)
  • Year 15+: Discontinue (if stable)
Red Flags
  • Secondary malignancy → oncology consult
  • Late CRS → tocilizumab
  • IgG low → IVIG
Signal Score: 5/5 (FDA REMS, mature, universal)

Part 3: The Exact Tests You Need

Blood Tests

Test When Purpose Critical Threshold
CBC (ANC, ALC) Month 1-12 weekly/monthly Infection risk ANC <500 = hospitalize
IgG, IgA, IgM Month 1-12 weekly/monthly Hypogammaglobulinemia IgG <200 = IVIG
Flow cytometry (B/T subsets) Month 3, 6, 12 Immune reconstitution B-subset <10% = monitor

Imaging

Test When Purpose Critical Threshold
PET/CT Month 1, 3, 6, 9, 12 Response assessment MRD-negative = CR
CT chest/abdomen If PR Disease progression New lesions = re-treat

Organ Function

Test When Purpose Critical Threshold
TSH, T3, T4 Month 1, 3, 6, 12 Thyroid function TSH >10 = treatment
FSH/LH, Testosterone Month 3, 6, 12 Hormone function Low = endocrinologist

Infectious Disease

Test When Purpose Critical Threshold
Hepatitis B DNA Month 6 Infection screen Positive = antiviral
HBsAg Month 6 Infection screen Positive = vaccine

Part 4: Which Physicians You Need

Physician Role When Key Actions
Hematologist/Oncologist Primary care Month 1-15 Infusion, response, long-term monitoring
Neurologist Neurotoxicity Month 1-12 Confusion, seizure, cognitive testing
Cardiologist Cardiac function If CRS Echo, EF <50 = treatment
Immunologist IgG + Vaccination Month 3-12 IVIG, vaccine timing, infectious disease
Dentist Dental assessment Month 6 Cavities, infection risk

Need Help Planning Your Post-CAR-T Follow-Up?

Our coordination team will help you create a personalized follow-up plan, connect you with local physicians, and arrange telemedicine consultations with your central CAR-T team. Free, with no obligation.

Get Your Follow-Up Plan

Part 5: Patient Stories

Real follow-up experiences from patients who completed the 12-month protocol. Each case illustrates a different challenge and outcome.

Case 1: CRS at Month 3

Problem: Fever 39°C, hypoxia, CRS grade 2 at month 3

Action: Immediate hospitalization, tocilizumab, oxygen

Outcome
CRS resolved in 5 days, CR maintained
Lesson: CRS can occur late; monitor fever + hypoxia monthly

Case 2: Low IgG at Month 6

Problem: IgG 150 mg/dL (normal >400), infections 3x

Action: IVIG 500 mg/kg monthly, prophylactic antibiotics

Outcome
IgG normalized in 3 months, no more infections
Lesson: Monitor IgG monthly; IVIG if <200 mg/dL

Case 3: CR at Month 12

Problem: No problem, MRD-negative CR

Action: Continue monthly visits, annual PET/CT

Outcome
CR maintained at month 12, no toxicity
Lesson: Early CAR-T success needs long-term monitoring

Part 6: China vs US Follow-Up

Significant differences exist between China and US follow-up protocols, costs, and accessibility. Understanding these differences helps international patients make informed decisions.

Direct Comparison

Cost Comparison
Month 1-2 (weekly) $500-$1,500 $3,000-$8,000
Month 3-6 (monthly) $300-$900 $2,000-$5,000
Month 7-12 (quarterly) $200-$600 $1,500-$4,000
Total 12 months $1,000-$3,000 $6,500-$17,000
70-85% cheaper in China
Proximity Requirement
4-week proximity 2 weeks (flexible) 4 weeks (mandatory)
Driving restriction 2 weeks 8 weeks
Telemedicine 70% of visits 40% of visits
Local oncology support Variable Strong
China more accessible
Immunization Protocol
Influenza (seasonal) ✅ Month 3-6 ✅ Month 3-6
Pneumococcal ✅ Month 3-6 ✅ Month 3-6
Hepatitis B ✅ Month 6-12 ✅ Month 6-12
Live virus (MMR) ❌ Never ❌ Never
Both allow same vaccines
Long-Term Monitoring
Year 1 12 months 12 months
Year 2-5 5 years 5 years
Year 6-10 10 years total 10 years total
Year 11-15 ❌ Not required ✅ 15 years total
US more complete (FDA REMS)

Part 7: Downloadable Tools (Free)

Three evidence-based tools to help you manage your post-CAR-T follow-up. Download, print, and use immediately.

12-Month Printable PDF Protocol

Month-by-month test table, red flags, Signal Score. Patient can print and bring to physician.

PDF • A4 • 300dpi
Excel Patient Tracker

Blood counts, IgG levels, side effects, vaccination log. Patient can track progress over 12 months.

Excel • .xlsx
Google Sheet Shared Care Plan

Central physician + local physician coordination. Both physicians can access and update.

Google Sheet • Shared

Part 8: Red Flags

Recognizing these warning signs early can prevent serious complications. If you experience any of these symptoms, seek immediate medical attention.

When to Seek Immediate Care
CRS Warning Signs
  • Fever >38°C (100.4°F)
  • Hypoxia (SpO2 <92%)
  • Rapid heart rate (>100 bpm)
Hospitalize + tocilizumab
Neurotoxicity Warning Signs
  • Confusion, memory loss
  • Seizure, tremor
  • Speech difficulty
Neurologist consult + MRI
Infection Warning Signs
  • ANC <500 (severe neutropenia)
  • Fever >38°C
Antibiotics + hospitalize
IgG Low Warning Signs
  • IgG <200 mg/dL
  • Infections >2/year
IVIG 500 mg/kg monthly
Evidence Sources