We evaluated the delivery of melanoma-specific radiolabeled monoclonal antibody (MAb) Fab fragments in a pilot study of three patients with melanoma metastatic to the central nervous system. Tumor samples demonstrated excellent immunohistochemical reactivity with Fab 96.5, specific for a 97,000-molecular-weight melanoma antigen (p97), or Fab 48.7, specific for a melanoma-associated proteoglycan antigen. All three patients received 131I-labeled tumor-specific Fab (5 to 7 mg, 1 mCi/mg) intravenously. On a separate occasion, two patients received 131I-labeled nonspecific Fab (5 to 7 mg, 1 mCi/mg). There was no uptake of either antibody into the region of the tumor (as documented by gamma camera brain images). However, there was increased uptake in the blood-brain barrier (BBB)-modified areas in all three patients when radiolabeled tumor-specific MAb was administered intravenously in conjunction with osmotic BBB opening. In one patient, the estimated cerebrovascular permeability X capillary surface area (PA) for the tumor-bearing hemisphere 3 hours after disruption was 1.16 X 10(-6) sec-1 compared to the PA of 0.395 X 10(-6) sec-1 in the nondisrupted hemisphere. Serial brain scans showed that greater than 90% of the radiolabeled antibody cleared from the brain by 72 hours. The highest radiation doses (rads) calculated per 7 mCi injection were: left brain (barrier-modified hemisphere), 5.46; right brain (non-barrier modified hemisphere), 1.68; thyroid, 98; stomach, 9.1; kidney, 39.9; and total body, 1.33. There seemed to be increased uptake of antibody in the tumor region after barrier modification in one patient, but antibody clearance from that region occurred at the same rate as from surrounding and apparently tumor-free brain. In one patient who had carcinomatous meningitis, we demonstrated antibody bound to only a fraction of the antigen binding sites on tumor cells in the cerebrospinal fluid after BBB modification. We have not shown distinct, persistent localization of antibody in brain tumor; studies investigating MAb dose and other parameters as the basis for this problem are under way.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/00006123-198706000-00011 | DOI Listing |
J Eval Clin Pract
February 2025
Ordos Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Ordos City, China.
Background: To investigate the effect of Midnight-noon Ebb-flow combined with five-element music therapy in the continuous nursing of patients with chronic wounds.
Methods: From March 2022 to November 2023, we recruited 50 eligible chronic wound patients and randomly divided them into two groups according to a random number table: the experimental group (n = 25) and the control group (n = 25). The control group was treated with conventional nursing measures.
J Med Biogr
January 2025
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Sakarya University, Sakarya, Turkey.
This article explores the life and work of Dr Caroline F. Hamilton, one of the pioneering female physicians sent from the USA to the Ottoman Empire in the late 19th century. Over a career spanning three decades, Hamilton provided critical medical care, especially to women, at the Azariah Smith Memorial Hospital in Aintab, overcoming legal, cultural, and political obstacles to become one of the first women licensed to practise medicine in the region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Surg
January 2025
Department of Surgical Oncology, Fourth Affiliated Hospital of China Medical University.
Background: Several autoimmune diseases (ADs) are considered risk factors for gastrointestinal (GI) cancers. This study pooled and appraised the evidence associating ADs to GI cancer risks.
Methods: Three databases were examined from initiation through 26 January 2024.
J Holist Nurs
January 2025
University of Central Florida, College of Nursing, Orlando, FL, USA.
The Nurse Practitioner Holistic Caring Instrument (NPHCI) is a 19-item, investigator-developed instrument designed to measure holistic caring in nurse practitioner (NP) practice. This paper evaluates multi-sample psychometric testing of the instrument, describing data from three samples, with analysis supporting the NPHCI as a valid and reliable instrument. Methods: The NPHCI has been administered in patient, NP program faculty, and NP convenience samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEClinicalMedicine
October 2024
Centre for Psychedelic Research, Division of Psychiatry, Department Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, United Kingdom.
Background: Psilocybin therapy (PT) produces rapid and persistent antidepressant effects in major depressive disorder (MDD). However, the long-term effects of PT have never been compared with gold-standard treatments for MDD such as pharmacotherapy or psychotherapy alone or in combination.
Methods: This is a 6-month follow-up study of a phase 2, double-blind, randomised, controlled trial involving patients with moderate-to-severe MDD.
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