Sera were obtained from two groups of patients. Group A included 7 patients with low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma treated with three or more cycles of standard-dose chemotherapy and recombinant human granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (rhG-CSF). The cytokine was administered to half the patients after the first chemotherapy cycle and to the other half after the second according to a randomized design and then to all patients from the third chemotherapy cycle on, until documented hemopoietic reconstitution. Group B included 3 patients with high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, 1 patient with resistant Hodgkin's disease, and 1 patient with multiple myeloma who received high-dose chemotherapy and rhG-CSF. Anti-G-CSF antibodies were detected in the sera of 4 patients. Both immunoglobulin IgM and IgG antibodies were detected at low levels in pretreatment sera from one group A patient. IgG antibody titers increased markedly during the first and second periods of G-CSF administration. IgG class antibodies developed in 3 groups B patients during the first course of rhG-CSF administration. Circulating anti-G-CSF antibodies did not seem to affect hematological recovery. Low levels of anti-G-CSF antibodies were also detected in sera (15/135) from different healthy adults and in sera (5/40) from umbilical cord blood. Saturable antibody binding and competition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and immunoblotting confirmed antibody specificity.
Serum samples were obtained from patients with lymphoid and plasma cell malignancies who received after chemotherapy human recombinant GM-CSF or G-CSF. Sera from some patients revealed the presence of anti-cytokine antibodies, particularly after repetitive cytokine injections. Antibody Fab binding in a saturable manner by ELISA and Western immuno-blotting confirmed antibody specificity. Anti-cytokine antibodies were detected before the exogenous cytokine injections in some patients, but increasing antibody levels were found after one or subsequent treatments. Low levels of anti-GM-CSF and anti-G-CSF antibodies were also detected in a relatively large proportion (about 10-30%) of normal sera from different adult healthy volunteers who had never been treated before with exologous cytokines as well as from cord blood. EBV-immortalized cord blood derived B-cell cultures were also found to produce anti GM-CSF and/or anti-G-CSF antibodies with high frequency.
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