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Journal ArticleDOI

Radioimmunoguided surgery using monoclonal antibody.

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TLDR
Improved selection of patients for antigen-positive tumors, the use of higher affinity second-generation antibodies, alternate routes of antibody administration, alternate radionuclides, and more sophisticatedly bioengineered antibodies and antibody combinations should all lead to improvements in radioimmunoguided surgery.
Abstract
The potential proficiency of radioimmunoguided surgery in the intraoperative detection of tumors was assessed using labeled monoclonal antibody B72.3 in 66 patients with tissue-proved tumor. Monoclonal antibody B72.3 was injected 5 to 42 days preoperatively, and the hand-held gamma-detecting probe was used intraoperatively to detect the presence of tumor. Intraoperative probe counts of less than 20 every 2 seconds, or tumor-to-adjacent normal tissue ratios less than 2:1 were considered negative (system failure). Positive probe counts were detected in 5 of 6 patients with primary colon cancer (83 percent), in 31 of 39 patients with recurrent colon cancer (79 percent), in 4 of 5 patients with gastric cancer (80 percent), in 3 of 8 patients with breast cancer (37.5 percent), and in 4 of 8 patients with ovarian cancer (50 percent) undergoing second-look procedures. Additional patients in each group were scored as borderline positive. Overall, radioimmunoguided surgery using B72.3 identified tumors in 47 patients (71.2 percent), bordered on positive in 6 patients (9.1 percent), and failed to identify tumor in 13 patients (19.7 percent). Improved selection of patients for antigen-positive tumors, the use of higher affinity second-generation antibodies, alternate routes of antibody administration, alternate radionuclides, and more sophisticatedly bioengineered antibodies and antibody combinations should all lead to improvements in radioimmunoguided surgery.

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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%.
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Whole-Body PET Imaging With [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose in Management of Recurrent Colorectal Cancer

TL;DR: Positron emission tomography was more sensitive and specific than CT for detection of recurrent colorectal cancer and may avoid unnecessary surgery, and thereby reduce the cost of patient treatment.
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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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraoperative probes and imaging probes.

TL;DR: In recent years intraoperative imaging probes have been developed that add the ability to see the details of the detected activity, giving the potential of using the technique in a low-contrast environment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A spectrum of monoclonal antibodies reactive with human mammary tumor cells

TL;DR: Eleven monoclonal antibodies were chosen that demonstrated reactivities with human mammary tumor cells and not with apparently normal human tissues, and all five major groups demonstrated binding to human metastatic mammary carcinoma cells both in axillary lymph nodes and at distal sites.
Journal Article

Distribution of Oncofetal Antigen Tumor-associated Glycoprotein-72 Defined by Monoclonal Antibody B72.3

TL;DR: The pancarcinoma distribution and lack of significant reactivity with normal adult tissues of monoclonal antibody B72.3 suggest its potential diagnostic and therapeutic utility for human carcinomas.
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

Radioimmunodetection of cancer with radioactive antibodies to carcinoembryonic antigen

TL;DR: Radioimmunodetection was more reliable in detecting cancer among the patient population studied than were the plasma CEA assay results, although in colorectal, cervical, and lung cancer patients there appeared to be a correlation between positive radioimmunoidetection and Plasma CEA elevation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recombinant interferon enhances monoclonal antibody-targeting of carcinoma lesions in vivo

TL;DR: Concomitant administration of Hu-IFN-alpha A and monoclonal antibody may be effective in overcoming the antigenic heterogeneity of carcinoma cell populations and in enhancing the efficacy of monocolonal antibodies in the detection and treatment of carcinomas lesions.
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