Locoregional treatment of low-grade B-cell lymphoma with CD3×CD19 bispecific antibodies and CD28 costimulation: I. Clinical phase I evaluation
✍ Scribed by Oliver Manzke; Hans Tesch; Peter Borchmann; Jürgen Wolf; Klaus Lackner; Axel Gossmann; Volker Diehl; Heribert Bohlen
- Book ID
- 101333835
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 240 KB
- Volume
- 91
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
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✦ Synopsis
We describe the first clinical application of T-cell-recruiting bispecific antibodies directly into the tumor without the need to preactivate the effector cells. In a Phase I clinical trial, 10 patients with low-grade B-cell lymphoma were treated by a single locoregional injection of CD3؋CD19 bispecific antibodies. Costimulatory signaling, which is required for the optimal activation of resting T cells, was provided by the simultaneous administration of CD28 antibodies. Equal amounts of both antibodies were injected together at 4 different dose levels (30 g: 3 patients; 270 g: 3 patients; 810 g: 3 patients; 1,600 g: 1 patient). The injection was well tolerated with mild to moderate adverse effects (2/10 patients) consisting of erythema and fever at the third dose level. The maximum tolerated dose was not reached at 810 g of injected antibodies. Three patients showed a serum peak of TNF␣ on day 2 or 3 after the antibody application, reflecting rather an activation of CD4-positive T cells than an FcR-mediated effect. Five patients developed anti-mouse antibodies after injection of the murine immunoglobulins. Nine patients were evaluable for restaging examinations 6 weeks after the antibody application, with 2 of them (22%) showing a local clinical response. We found that a single locoregional injection of CD3؋CD19؉CD28 antibodies is feasible up to a dose of at least 1,600 g of each antibody. However, the development of human anti-mouse antibodies points toward the requirement for new formats of bispecific proteins with reduced immunogenicity.
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## Abstract To develop an effective antitumor immunotherapy for B‐lineage non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma, we constructed a tetravalent tandem diabody (tanDb) specific for both human CD19 (B‐cell marker) and CD3 (T‐cell antigen). Here, we report the effective killing of malignant primary B cells from patien