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α-Radioimmunotherapy with (213)Bi-anti-CD38 immunoconjugates is effective in a mouse model of human multiple myeloma

In spite of development of molecular therapeutics, multiple myeloma (MM) is fatal in most cases. CD38 is a promising target for selective treatment of MM. We tested radioimmunoconjugates consisting of the α-emitter (213)Bi coupled to an anti-CD38 MAb in preclinical treatment of MM. Efficacy of (213)...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Teiluf, Katharina, Seidl, Christof, Blechert, Birgit, Gaertner, Florian C., Gilbertz, Klaus-Peter, Fernandez, Vanesa, Bassermann, Florian, Endell, Jan, Boxhammer, Rainer, Leclair, Stephane, Vallon, Mario, Aichler, Michaela, Feuchtinger, Annette, Bruchertseifer, Frank, Morgenstern, Alfred, Essler, Markus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4467108/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25576914
Descripción
Sumario:In spite of development of molecular therapeutics, multiple myeloma (MM) is fatal in most cases. CD38 is a promising target for selective treatment of MM. We tested radioimmunoconjugates consisting of the α-emitter (213)Bi coupled to an anti-CD38 MAb in preclinical treatment of MM. Efficacy of (213)Bi-anti-CD38-MAb was assayed towards different MM cell lines with regard to induction of DNA double-strand breaks, induction of apoptosis and initiation of cell cycle arrest. Moreover, mice bearing luciferase-expressing MM xenografts were treated with (213)Bi-anti-CD38-MAb. Therapeutic efficacy was monitored by bioluminescence imaging, overall survival and histology. (213)Bi-anti-CD38-MAb treatment induced DNA damage which did not result in activation of the G2 DNA-damage-response checkpoint, but instead in mitotic arrest and subsequent mitotic catastrophe. The anti-tumor effect of (213)Bi-anti-CD38-MAb correlated with the expression level of CD38 in each MM cell line. In myeloma xenografts, treatment with (213)Bi-anti-CD38-MAb suppressed tumor growth via induction of apoptosis in tumor tissue and significantly prolonged survival compared to controls. The major organ systems did not show any signs of (213)Bi-induced toxicity. Preclinical treatment of MM with (213)Bi-anti-CD38-MAb turned out as an effective therapeutic option.