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Query: UMLS:C0079731 (
B-cell lymphoma
)
16,671
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Only 2.0-6.8% of extranodal malignant lymphomas are found in the nasal region and paranasal sinuses. Primary malignant lymphoma of the paranasal sinuses usually occurs in the maxillary or ethmoid sinuses, and is very rare in the sphenoid sinus. Here we report a rare case of primary malignant lymphoma of the sphenoid sinus that was found accompanying orbital apex syndrome. The patient's progressively deteriorating neurological condition was improved after surgery via the transsphenoidal approach. A 52-year-old man was admitted with reduced left visual acuity, diplopia, and retroorbital pain. CT showed an isodense mass in the sphenoid sinus with slight enhancement, and MRI showed that the lesion was slightly hypointense on T1-weighted images, hypointense on T2-weighted images, and slightly enhanced by Gd-
DTPA
. On January 19, 1989, the patient suddenly became blind. An operation via the transsphenoidal approach was done as an emergency procedure to decompress the sphenoid sinus and the left optic canal. The histological diagnosis was non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the diffuse large cell type (
B cell lymphoma
). Malignant lymphoma in the paranasal sinuses is usually biopsied and treated by chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy without surgical resection. In this rare case, an operation via the transsphenoidal approach was effective in improving the patient's visual acuity.
...
PMID:[Primary malignant lymphoma in the sphenoid sinus with orbital apex syndrome; a case report]. 155 80
Copper-67 (67Cu) is one of the most promising radiometals for radioimmunotherapy because of its 61.5 hr physical half-life, abundant beta particles, and gamma emissions suitable for imaging. However, 67Cu is readily transferred from the usual chelates of EDTA or
DTPA
to albumen. We developed a new macrocycle (6-p-nitrobenzyl-TETA) to chelate copper. Bifunctional chelating agent p-bromoacetamidobenzyl-TETA was conjugated to Lym-1, a monoclonal antibody against human
B cell lymphoma
, without significantly altering its immunoreactivity. This conjugate was stably labeled with 67Cu under conditions chosen to optimize the yield of a high specific activity radiopharmaceutical. The biodistribution in RAJI tumor bearing mice demonstrated significant tumor uptake (14.7% ID per gram) and extended residence time (120 hr) in contrast to normal organs. After 24 hr, radioactivity was continuously cleared from all tissues except the tumor. This study suggests 67Cu labeled Lym-1 to be a promising radiopharmaceutical for potential use for radioimmunotherapy of
B cell lymphoma
.
...
PMID:Copper-67-labeled monoclonal antibody Lym-1, a potential radiopharmaceutical for cancer therapy: labeling and biodistribution in RAJI tumored mice. 325 25
CD22 antibodies (Abs) bound to B-cell lymphomas are known to be internalized and catabolized rapidly. Therefore, it would be expected that use of CD22 as a target for radioimmunotherapy should be enhanced by the use of "residualizing" radiolabels, which are trapped within the cell after catabolism of the Ab to which they had been conjugated. Our study was intended to evaluate this hypothesis using Ab LL2. In initial experiments, we found that LL2 binding was strongly temperature dependent, with approximately 15-fold greater binding at 37 degrees C than at 0 degrees C. A series of experiments suggested that this difference is due to a conformational change in the antigen at low temperature, so that the LL2 epitope is partially blocked. In vitro, residualizing labels-including 125I-dilactitol tyramine and 111In-
DTPA
-were retained by cells much longer than a conventional iodine label. In vivo, residualizing labels also showed a marked advantage in terms of uptake by Ramos
B-cell lymphoma
xenografts in nude mice. However, the absolute Ab uptake by xenografts was quite low, in comparison with results obtained with many carcinoma xenografts, which appears to be due in part to vascular properties of the
B-cell lymphoma
xenografts.
...
PMID:The advantage of residualizing radiolabels for targeting B-cell lymphomas with a radiolabeled anti-CD22 monoclonal antibody. 913 80
The somatostatin analogue [111In-
DTPA
-d-Phe1]-octreotide (111In-octreotide) allows scintigraphic visualization of somatostatin receptor-expressing tissue. While it is well known that a large variety of tissues express somatostatin receptors and 111In-octreotide scintigraphy has a clearly defined role in various neuroendocrine diseases, the clinical value of 111In-octreotide scintigraphy in brain tumours is still under clinical investigation. In 124 patients with 141 brain lesions (63 meningiomas, 24 pituitary adenomas, 10 gliomas WHO class I and II, 12 gliomas WHO class III and IV, 11 neurinomas and 2 neurofibromas, 7 metastases and 12 other varieties: three non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphomas, two epidermoids, one abscess, one angioleiomyoma, one chordoma, one haemangiopericytoma, one osteosarcoma, one plasmacytoma and one pseudocyst), 111In-octreotide scintigraphy was performed 4-6 and 24 h after i.v. injection of 110-220 MBq 111In-octreotide. Planar images of the head in four views with a 128x128 matrix and single-photon emission tomographic images (64x64 matrix) were acquired, and lesions were graded according to qualitative tracer uptake. Fifty-nine of the 63 meningiomas showed moderate to intense tracer uptake. Nine of 24 pituitary adenomas were visible; the remaining 15 did not show any tracer uptake. None of the class I and II gliomas with an intact blood-brain barrier were detected whereas 11/12 class III and IV gliomas showed 111In-octreotide uptake. None of the neurinomas or neurofibromas were positive. Five of seven metastases were classified as positive, as were the osteosarcoma, two of three non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphomas, one abscess, one angioleiomyoma, one chordoma and one haemangiopericytoma. The other varieties (one non-Hodgkin
B-cell lymphoma
, two epidermoids, one plasmacytoma and one pseudocyst) did not show 111In-octreotide uptake. The results demonstrate that a large variety of intracranial lesions express somatostatin receptors and therefore can be visualized by [111In-
DTPA
-d-Phe1]-octreotide scintigraphy. This technique can be valuable in the differentiation between meningiomas and pituitary adenomas, based on qualitative tracer uptake. [111In-
DTPA
-d-Phe1]-octreotide scintigraphy allows differentiation between meningiomas and neurinomas or neurofibromas and therefore provides complementary information to computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. Furthermore, this technique allows differentiation between scar tissue and recurrent meningiomas postoperatively and can help in non-invasive tumour differentiation of multiple intracranial lesions, which can be of value in defining the most adequate therapeutic strategy.
...
PMID:Somatostatin receptor imaging in intracranial tumours. 966 88
90Yttrium-labeled monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are likely to be important to radioimmunotherapy (RAIT) of a variety of cancers. The goal of this study was to select and evaluate a form of [90Y]mAb suitable for RAIT and determine conditions for high-yield, reproducible radiolabelings. 90Y-Labelings, at 2-40 mCi levels, of cdr-grafted versions of anti-
B-cell lymphoma
(hLL2) and anti-CEA (hIMMU-14) mAbs were optimized to >90% incorporations using the macrocyclic chelator DOTA as the metal carrier. In in vitro challenge assays, the stability of mAbs labeled with [90Y]DOTA was better than that of the corresponding [90Y]benzyl-
DTPA
conjugates. The retention of [90Y]DOTA-hLL2 on Raji tumor cells in vitro was similar to that of the same mAb labeled with [90Y]benzyl-
DTPA
and was about twice as much as with [125I]hLL2, indicating residualization of metalated mAb. Both [90Y]hLL2 conjugates, prepared using DOTA and Bz-
DTPA
, had similar maximum tolerated doses of 125 muCi in BALB/c mice and showed no discernible chelator-induced immune responses. Animal biodistribution studies in nude mice bearing Ramos human
B-cell lymphoma
xenografts revealed similar tumor and tissue uptake over a 10 day period, with the exception of bone uptake which was up to 50% lower for [88Y]DOTA-hLL2 compared to [88Y]Bz-
DTPA
-hLL2 at time points beyond 24 h. With [90Y]DOTA-hLL2 fragments, in vivo animal tumor dosimetries were inferior to those for the IgG, and kidney uptake was relatively high even with D-lysine administration. The ability of [111In]DOTA-hLL2 to accurately predict [90Y]DOTA-hLL2 biodistribution was established. These preclinical findings demonstrate that [90Y]DOTA-(CDR-grafted) mAbs are suitable for examination in clinical RAIT.
...
PMID:90Yttrium-labeled complementarity-determining-region-grafted monoclonal antibodies for radioimmunotherapy: radiolabeling and animal biodistribution studies. 981 72
A high-affinity IgG1 kappa murine monoclonal anti-CD20 antibody (IDEC-2B8) was developed for radioimmunotherapy of non-Hodgkin's
B-cell lymphoma
. A stable immunoconjugate (Zevalintrade mark) was prepared by reacting IDEC-2B8 with a derivative of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, designated MX-
DTPA
, a chelator exhibiting high affinity and retention for 90Y. Zevalin exhibited antigen specificity, human tissue reactivity, and preclinical safety profile comparable to the native antibody. The conjugate radiolabeled with 90Y (90Y-Zevalin) or 111In (111In-Zevalin) exhibited excellent retention of immunoreactivity with radioincorporations >95%. The radiolabeled conjugates formulated in PBS containing human serum albumin were stable in vitro at 4 degrees C for 48 h as indicated by negligible loss of radioisotope and retention of binding to CD20+ cells. In vitro human serum stability studies at 37 degrees C with 90Y-Zevalin indicated that loss of 90Y from the conjugate was minimal, averaging 1% per day. Biodistribution studies in BALB/c mice confirmed the in vitro stability of 90Y-Zevalin and 111In-Zevalin. In particular, excellent in vivo retention of 90Y by the conjugate was demonstrated by minimal bone accumulation (</=3% of the injected dose over three days). Radiation dose estimates to normal organs calculated from mouse biodistribution studies with 90Y-Zevalin were comparable to those determined in a phase I/II clinical trial and below generally accepted safe radiation levels. Studies in athymic mice bearing CD20+ tumors demonstrated that 111In-Zevalin accumulated in the tumors preferentially compared with normal organs. 90Y-Zevalin is currently being evaluated in phase III clinical trials for treatment of relapsed or refractory low-grade, follicular or transformed B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
...
PMID:Preclinical evaluation of 90Y-labeled anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody for treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1053 87
Optimal tumor imaging using radiolabeled antibodies (Abs) depends on obtaining the highest possible tumor/non-tumor localization ratios. To increase this ratio, in a mouse xenograft model system, we induced rapid blood clearance of the Ab after extensive penetration of a solid tumor, at 24 hr after Ab injection. By using galactosylated streptavidin (gal-SA) as a clearing agent for biotinylated Abs, and by using an 111In-
DTPA
(diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid) label, clearance was directed to hepatocytes (as opposed to Kupffer cells), and the radiolabel was excreted by the hepatocytes into bile, thereby reducing accumulation in the liver. In this study, we directly compared this approach with the use of 99mTc-F(ab)2 fragments, using the same Ab to carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), with a colon carcinoma xenograft. The gal-SA clearance method produced substantially higher tumor/non-tumor localization ratios for all tissues except the liver, and even for the liver the disadvantage of the gal-SA clearance method was small. We also tested the gal-SA clearance method with a xenograft model of human
B-cell lymphoma
, using anti-CD22. High tumor/non-tumor ratios were obtained, as previously described with carcinomas of the lung and colon. Therefore, this approach appears to be a generally applicable strategy to obtain relatively high tumor/non-tumor ratios.
...
PMID:Use of galactosylated-streptavidin as a clearing agent with 111In-labeled, biotinylated antibodies to enhance tumor/non-tumor localization ratios. 1213 23
Lymphomas are subdivided into HL and NHL and are more specifically classified into subtypes of HL or NHL according to the WHO classification. HLs involve the lymph nodes predominantly and only approximately 5% arise in extranodal sites, whereas 30% of NHLs present in extranodal sites. Imaging studies, including CT and MR imaging, cannot distinguish [figure: see text] HL from NHL, and cannot differentiate their various subtypes, necessitating a pathologic diagnosis. Clinical parameters, however, can be helpful in differentiating the two broad categories of lymphomas, and subtypes of lymphomas have predilections for different sites within the head and neck. HL is most commonly located in the lymph nodes of the neck and mediastinum. Marginal-zone lymphoma has an affinity for the ocular adnexa, salivary glands, larynx, and the thyroid gland. Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma is commonly encountered in the paranasal sinuses, mandible, maxilla, and Waldeyer ring. Burkitt lymphoma occurs more frequently in children and young adults and frequently affects the maxilla and mandible, with a greater distribution of involvement at a lower frequency. On imaging studies, the lymph nodes of HL and NHL are homogeneous and variable in size, with an average diameter from 2 to 10 cm. They may enhance slightly to moderately, display necrosis before and after treatment, and display calcification post-treatment. NHL in extranodal sites in the head and neck (nasopharynx, Waldeyer ring, oral cavity, and larynx) manifests frequently as a submucosal mass accompanied [figure: see text] by polypoid, bulky masses with a smooth mucosal surface. Clinically aggressive lymphomas, such as Burkitt lymphoma, diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
, and NK-/T-cell lymphomas are characterized by destruction of the maxilla, mandible, and bones around the paranasal sinuses, which is indistinguishable from bony destruction in other malignant tumors, such as SCC. Contrast CT is indicated for evaluation of cervical lymph nodes; the chest, including the mediastinum; the pelvic cavity; paranasal sinuses; and orbits. CT is also useful for detection of bone destruction involving the base of the skull, paranasal sinuses, and the mandible or maxilla. MR imaging is preferred for the assessment of extension of lymphomas to different fascial spaces (parapharyngeal, masticator, infratemporal fossa, tongue, and nasopharynx) and for intracranial extension. Lymphomas are isodense to muscle on CT and circumscribed with distinct margins that occasionally display extranodal extension with less-well-defined margins and areas of necrosis within the tumor matrix. Lymphomas appear low in signal intensity on T1-weighted images and low to high in signal intensity on T2-weighted images, with variable, but usually low, enhancement following introduction of Gadolinium-
DTPA
(Gd-DTPA) contrast material.
...
PMID:Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma of the head and neck: clinical, pathologic, and imaging evaluation. 1463 80
Studies were performed to determine the suitability of using two different anti-CD19 monoclonal antibodies to deliver the high energy beta-particle emitting isotope 90Y to
B-cell lymphoma
grown as flank tumors in athymic nude mice. The antibodies BU12 and HD37, both of the IgG1 subclass, recognize CD19, an internalizing B-lineage-specific membrane glycoprotein and member of the Ig supergene family. The antibodies were readily labeled with 90Y using the highly stable chelate, 1B4M-MX-
DTPA
. The radioimmunoconjugates selectively bound to the CD19 expressing B cell line Daudi, but not to CD19 negative control cells. Significantly more 90Y anti-CD19 bound to Daudi tumors growing in nude mice than did a control non-binding antibody (p = 0.001). The biodistribution data correlated with an anti-tumor effect. Anti-tumor activity was dose dependent and the best results were observed in mice receiving a single dose of approximately 300 uCi. The anti-CD19 antibody had significantly better anti-tumor activity as compared to a control 90Y-labeled antibody and most mice survived over 119 days with no evidence of tumor (p < 0.003). Histology studies showed no significant injury to the kidney, liver, or small intestine. Because radiolabeled anti-CD19 antibody can be used to deliver radiation selectively to lymphohematopoietic tissue, these data support the use of 90Y anti-CD19 antibodies in treating B-cell malignancies.
...
PMID:Radiotherapy of CD19 expressing Daudi tumors in nude mice with Yttrium-90-labeled anti-CD19 antibody. 1506 7
A 60-year-old woman presented with a subcutaneous mass on her scalp. Computed tomography (CT) showed a homogeneously enhanced mass of the parietal bone with both intra- and extra-calvarial extension and having destroyed the right parietal bone. The mass was hypointense on the T1-weighted magnetic resonance image, slightly hyperintense on the T2-weighted image and homogenously enhanced with Gd-
DTPA
. Bone scintigraphy showed prominent accumulation of radioisotopes in the scalp lesion. The tumour was removed, including the involved bone and dura mater. Histologic diagnosis was non-Hodgkin's
B-cell lymphoma
, and tumour cells had infiltrated into the dura mater. The patient was treated with radiotherapy and chemotherapy. She returned to ordinary daily life and has been well without recurrence for 3 years. Although primary malignant lymphoma of the cranial vault is rare, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis when a mass is encountered in the cranial vault. We have found only fourteen such cases in the literature, and we review these cases.
...
PMID:Primary malignant lymphoma of the cranial vault. 1746 Aug 15
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