Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were raised against hepatitis B virus core produced by a recombinant clone of Escherichia coli (rHBc). The three mAbs recognized rHBc by Western blot, suggesting that they reacted with non-conformational epitopes. Competition experiments between mAbs and human anti-HBc sera confirmed the existence of an immunodominant HBc epitope within the viral antigen. A monoclonal competition enzyme immunoassay using an IgM mAb conjugated to biotin and streptavidin-peroxidase as the detection system yielded 99% sensitivity and 100% specificity, when compared to other commercial assays.
Lymphocytic infiltration in and around the tumor together with sinus histiocytosis and follicular hyperplasia in regional nodes has been studied in a group of 310 patients with breast cancer treated by standard radical mastectomy. The semiquantitative grading of these particular changes made possible the division of patients into 3 classes of putative host resistance, namely, no or poor reaction, good reaction, and strong reaction. The grading was shown to have a close correlation with prognosis both 5 and 10 years after surgery. More interestingly, the incidence of metastases in the 3 classes was significantly different, i.e. much higher in the non-responder group, thus supporting the hypothesis that prognosis in breast cancer is closely related to a histological picture of cell-mediated immunity against the tumor, and that this resistance probably acts as a local barrier to the diffusion of the tumor.
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