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Case Reports
. 2001 Jan;36(1):194-6.
doi: 10.1002/1096-911X(20010101)36:1<194::AID-MPO1046>3.0.CO;2-B.

Disaloganglioside GD2 loss following monoclonal antibody therapy is rare in neuroblastoma

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Case Reports

Disaloganglioside GD2 loss following monoclonal antibody therapy is rare in neuroblastoma

K Kramer et al. Med Pediatr Oncol. 2001 Jan.

Abstract

Background: Gangliosicle GD2 is abundant on human neuroblastoma (NB). Monoclonal antibody 3F8 targeted to GD2 may have imaging and therapeutic potential. Antigen-negative clones can escape immune-mediated attack leading to clinical resistance or recurrence.

Procedure: Among 95 evaluable patients treated intravenously with 3F8 (94 Stage 4, 1 Stage 3), 66 received nonradiolabeled 3F8, 11 received 131-iodine-labeled-3F8 (8-28 mCi/kg) with autologous bone marrow rescue, and 18 received both forms of treatment. Prior to treatment, 90 patients tested positive for GD2 reactivity by bone marrow immunofluorescence (n = 68), tumor immunohistochemistry (n = 20), or diagnostic radioimmunoscintigraphy (n = 2).

Results: Of 62 patients who had refractory or recurrent neuroblastoma following 3F8 treatment, 61 (98%) tested positive for GD2 reactivity by bone marrow immunofluorescence (n = 51) or tumor immunohistochemistry (n = 10). The sole tumor that lost GD2 expression underwent phenotypic transformation into a pheochromocytoma-like tumor.

Conclusions: The persistence of GD2 expression in refractory or recurrent NB suggests that complete antigen loss is an uncommon event and cannot account for treatment failure.

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