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Radioimmunoguided surgery using iodine 125 b72.3 in patients with colorectal cancer

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TLDR
In patients with recurrent cancer, the antibody study provided unique data that precluded resection in 10 patients, and in another eight patients it extended the potentially curative procedure.
Abstract
• Preliminary data using B72.3 murine monoclonal antibody labeled with iodine 125 suggested that both clinically apparent as well as occult sites of colorectal cancer could be identified intraoperatively using a hand-held gamma detecting probe. We report the preliminary data of a multicenter trial of this approach in patients with primary or recurrent colorectal cancer. One hundred four patients with primary, suspected, or known recurrent colorectal cancer received an intravenous infusion of 1 mg of B72.3 monoclonal antibody radiolabeled with 7.4×10 Bq of iodine 125. Twenty-six patients with primary colorectal cancer and 72 patients with recurrent colorectal cancer were examined. Using the gamma detecting probe, 78% of the patients had localization of the antibody in their tumor; this included 75% of primary tumor sites and 63% of all recurrent tumor sites; 9.2% of all tumor sites identified represented occult sites detected only with the gamma detecting probe. The overall sensitivity was 77% and a predictive value of a positive detection was 78%. A total of 30 occult sites in 26 patients were identified. In patients with recurrent cancer, the antibody study provided unique data that precluded resection in 10 patients, and in another eight patients it extended the potentially curative procedure. ( Arch Surg . 1991;126:349-352)

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Local recurrence of colorectal cancer: The problem, mechanisms, management and adjuvant therapy

TL;DR: Prevention of recurrence by adequate surgery and adjuvant therapy as well as its early detection offer the best prospect of improving results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical treatment of liver metastases in patients with colorectal cancer

TL;DR: Patients with metastatic colorectal cancer limited to one lobe of the liver should undergo hepatic resection, and resection of hepatic metastases can improve overall survival of patients with coloreCTal cancer by only 1–2%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical management of locally recurrent rectal cancer

TL;DR: The surgical management of locally recurrent rectal cancer may involve major procedures and is not for the faint‐hearted; nevertheless, such treatment is preferable to chemotherapy and radiotherapy; the latter will fail over a period of months during which the patient is likely to experience intractable pain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phase I/II study of iodine 125-labeled monoclonal antibody A33 in patients with advanced colon cancer.

TL;DR: Low-energy emission radioimmunotherapy with doses of up to 350 mCi/m2 of 125I-mAb A33 did not cause bowel or bone marrow toxicity, and the long radioactivity retention in tumors suggests that isotopes with a long half-life may have a therapeutic advantage, based on calculated dose delivery to tumor versus normal tissue.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive overview of radioguided surgery using gamma detection probe technology

TL;DR: In the current review, this work has attempted to comprehensively evaluate the history, technical aspects, and clinical applications of radioguided surgery using gamma detection probe technology.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Use of Radiolabeled Antibodies to Carcinoembryonic Antigen for the Detection and Localization of Diverse Cancers by External Photoscanning

TL;DR: To determine whether tumors containing carcinoembryonic antigen could be detected by administration of a radiolabeled, affinity-purified, goat lgG, 18 patients with a history of cancer of diverse histopathology received an average total dose of 1.0 mCi of 131l-labeled lGG.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tumor localization of radiolabeled antibodies against carcinoembryonic antigen in patients with carcinoma: a critical evaluation.

TL;DR: Purified, [131I]-labeled goat antibodies against carcinoembryonic antigen, which have been shown to localize in human carcinoma in nude mice, were injected into patients with carcinoma and demonstrated that only the anti-CEA antibodies localized in tumors.
Journal Article

Quantitative Analyses of Selective Radiolabeled Monoclonal Antibody Localization in Metastatic Lesions of Colorectal Cancer Patients

TL;DR: These studies are among the most comprehensive to date concerning the definition of the actual delivery of radiolabeled MAb to carcinoma lesions versus a wide range of adjacent and distal normal tissues and lead the way for other diagnostic and potential therapeutic applications of this antibody either alone, or in combinations with other monoclonal antibodies.
Journal Article

Prolonged binding of a radiolabeled monoclonal antibody (B72.3) used for the in situ radioimmunodetection of human colon carcinoma xenografts.

TL;DR: The radiolabeled B72.3 immunoglobulin G was shown to efficiently localize human colon carcinoma xenografts in athymic mice and the potential use of this system as a model for radioimmunotherapy will be discussed.
Journal Article

Enhanced Tumor Binding Using Immunohistochemical Analyses by Second Generation Anti-Tumor-associated Glycoprotein 72 Monoclonal Antibodies versus Monoclonal Antibody B72.3 in Human Tissue

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that these second generation anti-tumor-associated glycoprotein MAbs may be more efficient than B72.3 in the further study of human carcinoma cell populations and in the diagnostic and therapeutic procedures presently being pursued with MAb B 72.3.
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