Improved therapy of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma xenografts using radionuclides pretargeted with a new anti-CD20 bispecific antibody

Abstract
A comparison of the therapeutic efficacy of a new bispecific monoclonal antibody (bsMAb)-pretargeting system vs the conventional direct targeting modality was undertaken. A bsMAb was made by coupling the Fab′ of a humanized anti-CD20 antibody to the Fab′ of a murine antibody directed against the peptide histamine-succinyl-glycine (HSG). The tumor targeting of the bsMAb was separated from the subsequent delivery of the radionuclide-bearing HSG peptide conjugated with 111In or 90Y. Nude mice bearing s.c. Ramos human B-cell lymphomas were injected with the bsMAb and then, 48 h later, 111In/90Y-HSG peptide was given. At 3 h postinjection, tumor/blood ratios for pretargeted 111In-HSG-peptide were similar to that observed with the directly conjugated 111In-anti-CD20 IgG at its highest level on day 7, but by day 1, tumor/blood ratios were about 10-fold higher than the IgG. Tumors progressed rapidly in animals given 800 μCi of 90Y-HSG peptide alone, whereas 5/10 animals in the group pretargeted by the anti-CD20 bsMAb were tumor-free 18 weeks later. The antitumor response in animals administered the pretargeted 90Y-HSG peptide was also significantly superior to treatment with the directly radiolabeled 90Y-anti-CD20 IgG, whether given as a single injection (PP=0.016). This bsMAb-pretargeting procedure significantly improves the therapeutic response of targeted radionuclides in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, warranting further development of this method of radioimmunotherapy.

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