| Literature DB >> 34667109 |
Nick Devoogdt1, Matthias D'Huyvetter2, Janik Puttemans1, Benoit Stijlemans3,4, Marleen Keyaerts1,5, Sam Vander Meeren6, Wim Renmans6, Karel Fostier7,8, Pieterjan Debie1, Heleen Hanssens1, Magdalena Rodak9, Marek Pruszynski9,10, Kim De Veirman11, Karin Vanderkerken11, Tony Lahoutte1,5, Alfred Morgenstern12, Frank Bruchertseifer12.
Abstract
To this day, multiple myeloma remains an incurable cancer. For many patients, recurrence is unavoidably a result of lacking treatment options in the minimal residual disease stage. This is due to residual and treatment-resistant myeloma cells that can cause disease relapse. However, patient-specific membrane-expressed paraproteins could hold the key to target these residual cells responsible for disease recurrence. Here, we describe the therapeutic potential of radiolabeled, anti-idiotypic camelid single-domain antibody fragments (sdAbs) as tumor-restrictive vehicles against a membrane-bound paraprotein in the syngeneic mouse 5T33 myeloma model and analogously assess the feasibility of sdAb-based personalized medicine for patients with multiple myeloma. Llamas were immunized using extracts containing paraprotein from either murine or human sera, and selective sdAbs were retrieved using competitive phage display selections of immune libraries. An anti-5T33 idiotype sdAb was selected for targeted radionuclide therapy with the β--particle emitter 177Lu and the α-particle emitter 225Ac. sdAb-based radionuclide therapy in syngeneic mice with a low 5T33 myeloma lesion load significantly delayed tumor progression. In five of seven patients with newly diagnosed myeloma, membrane expression of the paraprotein was confirmed. Starting from serum-isolated paraprotein, for two of three selected patients anti-idiotype sdAbs were successfully generated. ©2021 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34667109 DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-21-0220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261