Purpose: Rituximab, a humanized monoclonal antibody directed to the CD20 antigen present on B lymphocytes, could potentially abrogate the humoral immune response to murine monoclonal antibodies or immunotoxins by depleting antibody-producing B cells.

Experimental Design: A Phase II study of LMB-1, an immunotoxin targeting the Lewis Y tumor antigen, in combination with rituximab was conducted to test the hypothesis that rituximab could abolish or diminish the development of human antibodies to LMB-1. Five patients were treated in this study and received 375 mg/m(2) rituximab on days 1 and 7 followed by 45 micro g/kg/day LMB-1 on days 10, 12, and 14. The development of human antibodies against LMB-1 was detected using a serum neutralization and ELISA.

Results: All five of the patients had a total suppression of circulating CD20/CD19 B-cell population before the administration of the first dose of the immunotoxin. Before rituximab treatment, the mean percentage of CD20/CD19-positive B cells in the five treated patients was 19.8% (range, 4.5-29.8%) of the total peripheral lymphocytes. After two doses of rituximab, CD20/CD19-positive B lymphocytes constituted
Conclusions: Even though rituximab caused complete depletion of circulating CD20/CD19-positive B cells, it had no effect in suppressing the human antibody response to LMB-1 and may be of limited utility in suppressing human antibody responses to other immunogenic proteins.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-1160-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

immune response
8
development human
8
human antibodies
8
antibodies lmb-1
8
rituximab
6
lmb-1
5
pretreatment rituximab
4
rituximab inhibit
4
inhibit human
4
human immune
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!