Literature DB >> 9815539

Local hyperthermia improves uptake of a chimeric monoclonal antibody in a subcutaneous xenograft model.

M L Hauck1, M W Dewhirst, D D Bigner, M R Zalutsky.   

Abstract

This study was undertaken to determine the effect of local hyperthermia on the tissue distribution of a chimeric human/mouse IgG2 monoclonal antibody, 81C6, reactive with the extracellular matrix protein tenascin, which is expressed at high levels in gliomas, carcinomas of the breast and prostate, and other neoplasms. The D-54 MG s.c. glioma xenograft was treated with hyperthermia by immersion of the tumor-bearing leg in a circulating water bath. By 4 h after injection (immediately after heating), administration of chimeric 125I-labeled 81C6 (ch81C6) concomitantly with a 4-h local hyperthermia treatment at 41.8 degreesC resulted in an increase in tumor uptake of monoclonal antibody from a median of 12% of injected dose/g of tumor in normothermic mice to 42% of injected dose/g in mice receiving local hyperthermia. The increased level of uptake persisted in the heated tumors over the first 48 h and at 96 h. Additionally, heating increased the tumor:blood ratio of ch81C6 more than 7-fold at 4 h postinjection. The rate of uptake was also dramatically improved, with 60 and 90% of the maximum level of uptake achieved by 4 and 24 h, respectively, in the hyperthermia-treated mice, whereas the normothermic mice reached only 31 and 69% of their maximum uptake at those time points. In summary, local hyperthermia enhanced the absolute level and the rate of tumor uptake as well as tumor:normal tissue ratios for ch81C6. This approach may facilitate the clinical application of radionuclides with shorter half-lives, such as 211At, for the therapy of solid malignancies.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9815539

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  7 in total

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Review 3.  Elastomeric polypeptides.

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Journal:  Cancer Biol Med       Date:  2021-08-15       Impact factor: 5.347

5.  Endothelial Thermotolerance Impairs Nanoparticle Transport in Tumors.

Authors:  Alexander F Bagley; Ruth Scherz-Shouval; Peter A Galie; Angela Q Zhang; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Luke Whitesell; Christopher S Chen; Susan Lindquist; Sangeeta N Bhatia
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6.  Cytotoxicity of alpha-particle-emitting astatine-211-labelled antibody in tumour spheroids: no effect of hyperthermia.

Authors:  M L Hauck; R H Larsen; P C Welsh; M R Zalutsky
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Review 7.  Current Approaches for Improving Intratumoral Accumulation and Distribution of Nanomedicines.

Authors:  Mikhail O Durymanov; Andrey A Rosenkranz; Alexander S Sobolev
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2015-06-08       Impact factor: 11.556

  7 in total

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