关键词: 1-3-beta-glucan bismuth-213 dogs invasive fungal infections radioimmunotherapy

Mesh : Alpha Particles Animals Antibodies, Monoclonal / adverse effects chemistry therapeutic use Bismuth / chemistry Blastomyces / immunology physiology Dogs Invasive Fungal Infections / immunology therapy Mice Radioimmunotherapy / adverse effects Radioisotopes / chemistry Safety

来  源:   DOI:10.3390/molecules25163604   PDF(Sci-hub)   PDF(Pubmed)

Abstract:
Background: With the limited options available for therapy to treat invasive fungal infections (IFI), radioimmunotherapy (RIT) can potentially offer an effective alternative treatment. Microorganism-specific monoclonal antibodies have shown promising results in the experimental treatment of fungal, bacterial, and viral infections, including our recent and encouraging results from treating mice infected with Blastomyces dermatitidis with 213Bi-labeled antibody 400-2 to (1→3)-β-glucan. In this work, we performed a safety study of 213Bi-400-2 antibody in healthy dogs as a prelude for a clinical trial in companion dogs with acquired invasive fungal infections and later on in human patients with IFI. Methods: Three female beagle dogs (≈6.1 kg body weight) were treated intravenously with 155.3, 142.5, or 133.2 MBq of 213Bi-400-2 given as three subfractions over an 8 h period. RBC, WBC, platelet, and blood serum biochemistry parameters were measured periodically for 6 months post injection. Results: No significant acute or long-term side effects were observed after RIT injections; only a few parameters were mildly and transiently outside reference change value limits, and a transient atypical morphology was observed in the circulating lymphocyte population of two dogs. Conclusions: These results demonstrate the safety of systemic 213Bi-400-2 administration in dogs and provide encouragement to pursue evaluation of RIT of IFI in companion dogs.
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