Radiat Med 1998 Sep-Oct;16(5):391-7

99mTc-labeled chimeric anti-NCA 95 antigranulocyte monoclonal antibody for bone marrow imaging.

Sarwar M, Higuchi T, Tomiyoshi K, Inoue T, Oriuchi N, Kbalil A, Alyafei S, Sakahara H, Chung JK, Endo K

Department of Nuclear Medicine, Gunma University School of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan.

Chimeric mouse-human antigranulocyte monoclonal antibody (ch MAb) against non-specific cross-reacting antigen (NCA-95) was labeled with 99mTc (using a direct method) and 125I (using the chloramine T method), and its binding to human granulocytes and LS-180 colorectal carcinoma cells expressing carcinoembryonic antigen on their surfaces, cross-reactive with anti-NCA-95 chimeric monoclonal antibody, increased in proportion to the number of cells added and reached more than 80% and 90%, respectively. In biodistribution studies, 99mTc and 125I-labeled ch anti-NCA-95 MAb revealed high tumor uptake, and the tumor-to-blood ratio was 2.9 after 24 hours. The tumor-to-normal-organ ratio was also more than 3.0 in all organs except for the tumor-to-kidney ratio. Scintigrams of athymic nude mice confirmed the results of biodistribution studies that showed higher radioactivity in tumor and kidney of the mice administered with 99mTc-labeled ch MAb. A normal volunteer injected with 99mTc-labeled ch anti-NCA-95 antigranulocyte MAb showed clear bone marrow images, and a patient with aplastic anemia revealed irregular uptake in his lumbar spine, suggesting its utility for bone marrow scintigraphy and for the detection of hematological disorders, infections, and bone metastasis.

PMID: 9862166, UI: 99076982