EMERGENCE OF IDIOTYPE VARIANTS DURING TREATMENT OF B-CELL LYMPHOMA WITH ANTI-IDIOTYPE ANTIBODIES NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE Meeker, T., Lowder, J., Cleary, M. L., Stewart, S., Warnke, R., Sklar, J., Levy, R. 1985; 312 (26): 1658-1665

Abstract

We studied two patients with malignant B-cell lymphoma that manifested resistance to the therapeutic effects of anti-idiotype antibody because of the emergence of subclones with changes in their immunoglobulin idiotypes. In both patients, tumor-cell populations arose that were unreactive with anti-idiotype antibody but that retained surface immunoglobulin. One of the patients had an additional subpopulation of tumor cells that had switched from mu to gamma heavy-chain expression. Study of the immunoglobulin genes in the tumors confirmed that the subpopulations were derived from the same original clone of neoplastic B cells in each patient. The available data suggest that the idiotypic variation observed was the result of somatic mutation in the variable region of the active immunoglobulin genes. The fact that such mutations became evident over a short time and in the context of a partial tumor response suggests that the antibody therapy exerted a strong selective force against tumor cells that expressed the idiotype determinant. Multiple anti-idiotype antibodies may therefore be needed to identify all cells of a malignant clone, and some patients may require treatment with more than one monoclonal antibody.

View details for Web of Science ID A1985AKT8700002

View details for PubMedID 3923352