[HTML][HTML] Induction of immune responses in patients with B-cell lymphoma against the surface-immunoglobulin idiotype expressed by their tumors

LW Kwak, MJ Campbell, DK Czerwinski… - … England Journal of …, 1992 - Mass Medical Soc
LW Kwak, MJ Campbell, DK Czerwinski, S Hart, RA Miller, R Levy
New England Journal of Medicine, 1992Mass Medical Soc
Background. The idiotypic determinants of the surface immunoglobulin of a B-cell lymphoma
can serve as a clonal tumor-specific marker, which may have implications for
immunotherapy. We sought to determine whether idiotype-specific immune responses
against this autologous antigen could be induced in patients with B-cell lymphoma.
Methods. Nine patients were selected who had minimal residual disease or a complete
remission after chemotherapy. Each received a series of subcutaneous injections of the …
Background
The idiotypic determinants of the surface immunoglobulin of a B-cell lymphoma can serve as a clonal tumor-specific marker, which may have implications for immunotherapy. We sought to determine whether idiotype-specific immune responses against this autologous antigen could be induced in patients with B-cell lymphoma.
Methods
Nine patients were selected who had minimal residual disease or a complete remission after chemotherapy. Each received a series of subcutaneous injections of the immunoglobulin derived from his or her tumor cells (immunoglobulin-idiotype protein), which had been conjugated to a protein carrier and mixed with an immunologic adjuvant.
Results
In seven of the nine patients the injections induced sustained idiotype-specific immunologic responses of the humoral type (two patients), the cell-mediated type (four patients), or both (one patient). The use of an adjuvant was essential for these immune responses. The induced antibodies bound specifically to autologous immunoglobulin idiotype, inhibited the binding of murine monoclonal antiidiotype antibodies, and bound autologous tumor cells. Cell-mediated responses were demonstrated by the specific proliferation of immune peripheral-blood mononuclear cells to the soluble immunoglobulin-idiotype protein in vitro. The tumors of both of the patients with measurable disease regressed completely. Toxicity associated with the vaccine was minimal and consisted only of mild reactions at the site of intramuscular injection.
Conclusions
These results demonstrate that autologous immunoglobulin idiotype can be formulated into an immunogenic, tumor-specific antigen in humans with B-cell lymphoma, and they provide the background for large-scale trials of active specific immunotherapy of this disease. (N Engl J Med 1992;327:1209–15.)
The New England Journal Of Medicine