AI Article Synopsis

  • This study compares the effectiveness of two types of antibodies against colorectal cancer: intact A5B7 IgG1 monoclonal antibodies and F(ab')2 fragments, revealing that the F(ab')2 fragments localized more rapidly in tumors.
  • Ten patients received the intact antibody, while nine received the F(ab')2 fragment, with both groups showing tumor responses despite myelosuppression being a common side effect.
  • The findings suggest that F(ab')2 fragments could enhance radioimmunotherapy (RIT) by allowing for quicker penetration into tumor masses, potentially leading to higher localized doses of treatment.

Article Abstract

Studies in animal tumour models of colorectal cancer suggest that F(ab')2 antibody fragments to carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) labelled with iodine-131 give superior therapy compared with intact anti-CEA antibody. The purpose of this study was to investigate this hypothesis in patients. Ten patients received intact A5B7 IgG1 mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb) to CEA and nine patients received the F(ab')2 fragment of the same antibody. The biodistribution for each molecule was compared using quantitative single-photon emission computerised tomographic (SPECT) gamma-camera imaging. Tumour responses were seen in both groups and myelosuppression was the limiting toxicity. F(ab')2 localised more rapidly than intact antibody in tumour, giving a mean percentage injected activity per kg at 4.25 h after injection of 8.2% for F(ab')2 compared with 4.4% for intact antibody (P < 0.05). No significant difference in antibody clearance from, or cumulative dose per unit administered activity (cGy MBq-1) to, tumour was seen. Distribution in blood was similar for both the intact and fragment antibody. These findings are consistent with more rapid penetration of the smaller F(ab')2 into tumour masses. More efficient early uptake will give higher maximum dose rates to the tumour which is valuable for radioimmunotherapy (RIT) when low dose rates may limit effectiveness of treatment. F(ab')2 fragments may provide a substantially enhanced method of delivering RIT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2033373PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1994.338DOI Listing

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