Author:
Laurent G,Pris J,Farcet JP,Carayon P,Blythman H,Casellas P,Poncelet P,Jansen FK
Abstract
Abstract
Two leukemia patients, refractory to chemotherapy, were treated with T101-ricin A-chain immunotoxin (T101 IT). Patient 1 (T-ALL) received a single 13.5 mg dose of T101 IT IV (12-hour infusion). Patient 2 (B-CLL) was treated with a daily 25 mg dose of T101 IT IV (two-hour infusion) over three consecutive days. Patient 2 also received 300 mg of chloroquine IM on days two and three as enhancer. In vivo binding of T101 IT was demonstrated by FACS analysis using either an antimouse Ig- FITC or anti-A-chain-FITC antibodies. Following IT therapy, the expression of T65 antigen on target cells dropped to 50% and 20% of pretreatment levels, respectively. In patient 1, circulating blast cells remained unsaturated during therapy while in patient 2, cells were fully saturated for four to six hours following each infusion. Pharmacokinetic studies showed a rapid clearance of T101 IT after IV administration. Antimouse and anti-A-chain antibodies could not be detected. There were no treatment-related adverse effects. In patient 1 a rapid but transient decrease of target cells was observed, possibly related to the administration of the antibody part of T101 IT. In contrast, patient 2 showed a 40% reduction of the lymphocyte count, which remained stable over a period of 2 weeks. Such a clinical benefit following IT therapy in patient 2 could be ascribed to the absence of circulating free antigen and the complete saturation of target cells.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
65 articles.
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