Skip to main content
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII logoLink to Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII
. 1996 Mar;42(2):81–87. doi: 10.1007/s002620050255

Humoral anti-idiotypic and anti-anti-idiotypic immune response in cancer patients treated with monoclonal antibody 17-1A

Jan Fagerberg, Peter Ragnhammar 1, Maria Liljefors 1, Anna-Lena Hjelm 1, Håkan Mellstedt 1, Jan-Erik Frödin 1, J Fagersberg 1
PMCID: PMC11037570  PMID: 8620524

Abstract

 A group of 96 patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma were treated with the mouse (m) or chimeric (c) (mouse variable regions × human IgG1 constant regions) monoclonal antibody (mAb) 17-1A recognizing the tumour-associated antigen GA733-2. Eighty-two of the 83 patients treated with mmAb17-1A and 69% of the patients given cmAb17-1A (n = 13) developed anti-idiotypic antibodies (ab2). Auto-antibodies binding to tumour cells expressing GA733-2 were found in 7% of the patients. In a further 38 patients (40%) antitumour-cell antibodies, i.e. anti-anti-idiotypic antibodies (ab3), were induced by the mAb17-1A therapy. Patients with detectable ab3 after treatment had significantly higher ab2 levels than those not developing ab3. Addition of granulocyte/macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) to mmAb17-1A significantly enhanced the induction of ab2 as well as induction of anti-anti-idiotypic antibodies (ab3), compared to mmAb17-1A alone. Patients with a high increase in antitumour-cell antibodies (ab3) induced by the therapy lived significantly longer than patients with no or a low level of induction of ab3 (P = 0.016). The results indicate that induction of an idiotypic network response might be an important effector mechanism in mAb therapy.

Keywords: Key words Idiotypic network, Colorectal carcinoma, Monoclonal antibodies, GM-CSF.

Footnotes

Received: 20 October 1995 / Accepted: 18 December 1995


Articles from Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII are provided here courtesy of Springer

RESOURCES