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Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII logoLink to Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII
. 1997 Nov;45(3-4):171–173. doi: 10.1007/s002620050425

Bispecific Ab therapy of B-cell lymphoma: target cell specificity of antibody derivatives appears critical in determining therapeutic outcome

Jamie Honeychurch 1, Andrew Cruise 1, Alison L Tutt 1, M J Glennie 1
PMCID: PMC11037658  PMID: 9435866

Abstract

Despite the success of mAb and bispecific (bs)Ab in the treatment of certain malignancies, there is still considerable uncertainty about the most appropriate format in which they should be used. In the current work we have investigated a panel of bsAb [IgG and F(ab)2] with dual specificity for T cells and neoplastic B cells. Throughout this work, anti-CD2 or anti-CD3 were used to bind the mouse T cells, and antibodies to surface IgM idiotype (Id), CD19, CD22, or MHC class II were used to target mouse B cell lymphomas BCL1 or A31. In vitro, killing was measured in a conventional cytotoxicity assay using 51Cr-labelled A31 and BCL1 cells as targets and activated mouse splenocytes as effectors. bsAb showed a wide range of cytotoxic activities, which could be ranked in the following order: [anti-CD3×anti-class-II]>[anti-CD3×anti-CD19] >[anti-CD3×anti-Id]>[anti-CD3×anti-CD22], with the [anti-CD2×anti-Id] derivative showing relatively little cytotoxic activity. This hierarchy of activity indicates some correlation with the binding activity of the bsAb on target cells, but showed a much stronger parallel with the tendency of the anti-(target cells) mAb to undergo antigenic modulation (less modulation, more killing). In vivo, the situation was completely different and only the anti-ld derivatives, [anti-CD3×anti-ld] and [anti-CD2×anti-ld], were effective in prolonging the survival of tumour-bearing animals. Under optimal conditions Id-positive tumour was eradicated with a single treatment of bsAb. We conclude from this work that the target cell specificity of a bsAb is critical in determining therapeutic outcome and that in vitro cytotoxicity assays do not predict in vivo activity.

Keywords: Key words Immunotherapy, Bispecific,  Monoclonal antibody, Transmembrane signalling, Lymphoma

Footnotes

Accepted: 14 October 1997


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