BACKGROUND: Antitumor effects of antibodies against ganglioside antigens of melanoma have been reported, but neither optimal doses nor mechanisms have been established. METHODS: This Phase IB trial of the murine immunoglobulin IgG(3) monoclonal antibody R(24) against disialoganglioside GD3 was conducted with 37 patients to define better the dose-response relation and mechanism of action of R(24) in patients with metastatic melanoma. RESULTS: Dose-limiting toxicity consisted of a pulmonary capillary leak syndrome in 3 of 5 patients in the 80 mg/M(2)/day dosage tier. Serial blood and tumor biopsy samples were obtained prior to therapy and on Days 5, 9, and 22 following R(24) infusion. Tumor biopsy-infiltrating lymphocytes were enumerated in peritumoral, endotumoral, and perivascular compartments: endotumoral CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and HLA-DR(+) T cells increased over time on R(24) antibody. Endotumoral CD4 lymphoid infiltrate activation (DR expression) and antibody-dependent cytotoxicity were the greatest in the one patient who achieved a complete response. CONCLUSIONS: Clinical response was associated with depression in natural killer (CD56(+) and CD56(+)DR(+)) blood cells (P = 0.03) and was associated with R(24) dosage (P = 0.01). A complete response that lasted 2 years and a partial response that lasted 2 months occurred at a dose of 1 mg/M(2)/day. The limited number of clinical responses observed in this trial hampered the correlation of antitumor and immune parameters but provided a rational foundation for the future evaluation of antiganglioside antibodies. Copyright 2000 American Cancer Society.
BACKGROUND: Antitumor effects of antibodies against ganglioside antigens of melanoma have been reported, but neither optimal doses nor mechanisms have been established. METHODS: This Phase IB trial of the murine immunoglobulin IgG(3) monoclonal antibody R(24) against disialogangliosideGD3 was conducted with 37 patients to define better the dose-response relation and mechanism of action of R(24) in patients with metastatic melanoma. RESULTS: Dose-limiting toxicity consisted of a pulmonary capillary leak syndrome in 3 of 5 patients in the 80 mg/M(2)/day dosage tier. Serial blood and tumor biopsy samples were obtained prior to therapy and on Days 5, 9, and 22 following R(24) infusion. Tumor biopsy-infiltrating lymphocytes were enumerated in peritumoral, endotumoral, and perivascular compartments: endotumoral CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and HLA-DR(+) T cells increased over time on R(24) antibody. Endotumoral CD4 lymphoid infiltrate activation (DR expression) and antibody-dependent cytotoxicity were the greatest in the one patient who achieved a complete response. CONCLUSIONS: Clinical response was associated with depression in natural killer (CD56(+) and CD56(+)DR(+)) blood cells (P = 0.03) and was associated with R(24) dosage (P = 0.01). A complete response that lasted 2 years and a partial response that lasted 2 months occurred at a dose of 1 mg/M(2)/day. The limited number of clinical responses observed in this trial hampered the correlation of antitumor and immune parameters but provided a rational foundation for the future evaluation of antiganglioside antibodies. Copyright 2000 American Cancer Society.
Authors: I Caroline Le Poole; Adam I Riker; M Eugenia Quevedo; Lawrence S Stennett; Ena Wang; Francesco M Marincola; W Martin Kast; June K Robinson; Brian J Nickoloff Journal: Am J Pathol Date: 2002-02 Impact factor: 4.307
Authors: Ancy Thomas; Saurav Sumughan; Emilia R Dellacecca; Rohan S Shivde; Nicola Lancki; Zhussipbek Mukhatayev; Cristina C Vaca; Fei Han; Levi Barse; Steven W Henning; Jesus Zamora-Pineda; Suhail Akhtar; Nikhilesh Gupta; Jasmine O Zahid; Stephanie R Zack; Prathyaya Ramesh; Dinesh Jaishankar; Agnes Sy Lo; Joel Moss; Maria M Picken; Thomas N Darling; Denise M Scholtens; Daniel F Dilling; Richard P Junghans; I Caroline Le Poole Journal: JCI Insight Date: 2021-11-22