|
|
Antibody-guided
three-step therapy for high grade glioma with yttrium-90 biotin
Paganelli G, Grana C, Chinol M, Cremonesi M, De Cicco C, De Braud F,
Robertson C, Zurrida S, Casadio C, Zoboli S, Siccardi AG, Veronesi U
Division of Nuclear Medicine,
European Institute of Oncology, Milan, Italy
While the incidence of brain tumours seems to be increasing, median survival in
patients with glioblastoma remains less than 1 year, despite improved diagnostic
imaging and neurosurgical techniques, and innovations in treatment.
We have
developed an avidin-biotin pre-targeting approach for delivering therapeutic
radionuclides to gliomas, using anti-tenascin monoclonal antibodies, which seems
potentially effective for treating these tumours.
We
treated 48 eligible patients with histologically confirmed grade III or IV
glioma and documented residual disease or recurrence after conventional
treatment.
Three-step
radionuclide therapy was performed by intravenous administration of 35 mg/m2 of
biotinylated anti-tenascin monoclonal antibody (1st step), followed 36 h later
by 30 mg of avidin and 50 mg of streptavidin (2nd step), and 18-24 h later by
1-2 mg of yttrium-90-labelled biotin (3rd step).
90Y
doses of 2.22-2.96 GBq/m2 were administered; maximum tolerated dose (MTD) was
determined at 2.96 GBq/m2.
Tumour
mass reduction (>25%-100%), documented by computed tomography or magnetic
resonance imaging, occurred in 12/48 patients (25%), with 8/48 having a duration
of response of at least 12 months.
At
present, 12 patients are still in remission, comprising four with a complete
response, two with a parital response, two with a minor response and four with
stable disease.
Median
survival from 90Y treatment is 11 months for grade IV glioblastoma and 19 months
for grade III anaplastic gliomas.
Avidin-biotin
based three-step radionuclide therapy is well tolerated at the dose of 2.2
GBq/m2, allowing the injection of 90Y-biotin without bone marrow
transplantation.
This new
approach interferes with the progression of high-grade glioma and may produce
tumour regression in patients no longer responsive to other therapies.
PMID: 10199940 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10199940&dopt=Abstract |