A total of 41 ch14.18/CHO courses were given (10 × 3 courses, 5 × 2 courses, 1 × 1 course). Side effects were similar in expectedness, frequency and magnitude to those reported for ch14.18/SP2/0. The dose level of 20 mg/m(2)/day was confirmed. Toxicity was reversible and no treatment-related deaths occurred. In children, the peak plasma concentration was 16.51 µg/ml ± 5.9 µg/ml and the half-life was 76.91 h ± 52.5 h. A partial response following ch14.18/CHO was observed in 2/7 patients with residual disease. In mice, the half-lives were 22.7 h ± 1.9h for ch14.18/CHO and 25.0 h ± 1.9 h for ch14.18/SP2/0. The biodistribution of (125)I-ch14.18/CHO in mice with neuroblastoma was identical to (125)I-ch14.18/SP2/0, indicating GD 2 targeting activity in vivo. Ch14.18 produced in CHO cells showed an unchanged toxicity profile and pharmacokinetics in neuroblastoma patients compared with ch14.18 produced in SP2/0 cells, and evidence of clinical activity was observed. In mice, analysis of pharmacokinetics and biodistribution showed comparable results between ch14.18/CHO and ch14.18/SP2/0. Based on these results, ch14.18/CHO was accepted for prospective clinical evaluation.
Disialoganglioside GD2 is an established target for immunotherapy in neuroblastoma. We tested the hypothesis that active immunization against the glycolipid GD2 using DNA vaccines encoding for cyclic GD2-mimicking decapeptides (i.e., GD2 mimotopes) is effective against neuroblastoma. For this purpose, two GD2 peptide mimotopes (MA and MD) were selected based on docking experiments to anti-GD2 antibody ch14.18 (binding free energy: À41.23 kJ/mol for MA and À48.06 kJ/mol for MD) and Biacore analysis (mol/L for MA and 5.3 Â 10 À5 mol/L for MD), showing a higher affinity of MD over MA. These sequences were selected for DNA vaccine design based on pSecTag2-A (pSA) also including a T-cell helper epitope. GD2 mimicry was shown following transfection of CHO-1 cells with pSA-MA and pSA-MD DNA vaccines, with twice-higher signal intensity for cells expressing MD over MA. Finally, these DNA vaccines were tested for induction of tumor protective immunity in a syngeneic neuroblastoma model following oral DNA vaccine delivery with attenuated Salmonella typhimurium (SL 7207). Only mice receiving the DNA vaccines revealed a reduction of spontaneous liver metastases. The highest anti-GD2 humoral immune response and natural killer cell activation was observed in mice immunized with the pSA-MD, a finding consistent with superior calculated binding free energy, dissociation constant, and GD2 mimicry potential for GD2 mimotope MD over MA. In summary, we show that DNA immunization with pSA-MD may provide a useful strategy for active immunization against neuroblastoma. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(21): 10567-75)
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