Detection of primary colorectal cancer with indium 111 monoclonal antibody B72.3
R. J. Doerr, H. Abdel-Nabi, J. M. Baker and S. Steinberg
Department of Surgery, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Buffalo, NY.
B72.3 is a murine monoclonal antibody of the immunoglobulin subclass IgG1
directed against TAG-72, a cell surface antigen present on colorectal
carcinoma cells. We investigated the utility of scanning with indium
111-labeled B72.3 in 16 patients with a high clinical suspicion of or
biopsy-proven primary colorectal cancer. Each patient received 1 or 2 mg of
B72.3 monoclonal antibody labeled with 152 MBq of indium 111. Patients
underwent scanning 2 to 3 days and 7 days after infusion by planar and
emission computed tomography. Nineteen lesions were confirmed in 12
patients. Three patients with benign polyps had true-negative monoclonal
antibody scans. Indium 111-labeled imaging of B72.3 detected nine of 19
lesions. Unsuspected tumor sites were identified by monoclonal antibody
scan in three patients. By detection of additional abdominal disease and
extra-abdominal spread, indium 111-labeled scanning of B72.3 directly
affected treatment in 18% of patients.