Abstract

Cisplatin (CDDP), a most powerful anticancer agent, was complexed to a polycarboxylic carrier carboxymethyldextran to form a platinum(II) multicomplex. Complexing occurs by displacement of the chlorine atoms of the platinum coordination complex by hydrogen of polymer side-chains to form mono- or bifunctional anchoring to adjacent carboxyls on the carrier. The carrier-complexed drug interacted with DNA and was pharmacologically active against tumor cells. The drug-carrier complex was immunotargeted to human epidermoid carcinoma (KB) tumors, using the monoclonal antibody (mAb) 108 directed against the epidermal growth factor receptor that is overexpressed on KB cells. Biotinyl-monoclonal antibody was bound to a platinum(II)-carboxymethyldextran-avidin conjugate and the immune complex was administered into established subcutaneous KB tumors to evaluate its effects upon intratumor treatment. The results showed that the immune complex was specifically effective in inhibiting tumor growth. The antibody in the complex must be tumor-specific to anchor the drug-carrier multicomplex to the tumor site since an unbiotinylated antibody, or replacing the anti-KB antibody by a biotinylated antibody of a different specificity, resulted in reduced or abolished inhibitory effects.

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