Abstract

Sera from 98 melanoma patients, 20 noncancer patients with immune complex-associated diseases, and 90 normal donors were analyzed for anticomplementary (AC) activity by the complement consumption method. Some of these sera were also tested for immune complex-like materials by the Raji cell radioimmune assay. In addition, serum samples from ten melanoma patients were analyzed serially to correlate the AC activity with clinical course. Significant levels of Ac activity were found in 45% of melanoma sera, 75% of nonmalignant immune complex-associated disease sera, and 10% of normal donors' sera. In some patients, AC activity decreased and became undetectable as their disease progressed. AC-negative serum samples taken from melanoma patients late in the course of disease when the tumor burden was large became anticomplementary when mixed with autologous or allogeneic serum samples taken earlier at the time of little or no tumor burden. The early serum samples contained antibodies against autologous tumor extracts, as shown by a complement fixation test. Absorption of early serum samples with cultured allogeneic melanoma cells reduced their ability to consume complement when mixed with autologous late serum samples, suggesting the presence of free antigen in the latter. The mixed samples of early and late sera and the sera positive in the complement consumption test contained heavy nonmonomeric IgG. Therefore, the AC activity of melanoma sera could be due to tumor-associated antigen-antibody complexes.

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