Abstract
Cancer vaccine/immunotherapy rarely involves systemic administration of an immunogenic compound to an actively immunized host. We have developed such a strategy that utilizes folate to deliver antigenic haptens [e.g., fluorescein (FITC) and dinitrophenyl] to folate receptor-positive tumors in a hapten-pre-vaccinated host. Here, we investigated the safety of this novel approach and developed strategies to prevent drug-related hypersensitivity. Using FITC as the model hapten, we identified a potential source of allergic species in folate-FITC preparations by LC-MS/MS. In mice and guinea pigs, we tested the significance of this impurity by passive cutaneous anaphylaxis and active systemic anaphylaxis assays. We studied the effect of immunogen (e.g., KLH-FITC) dose and derived a desensitization regimen that was further evaluated in a murine tumor model. Administration of folate-FITC with low multi-haptenated contaminants (e.g. bis-FITC) resulted in hypersensitivity in underimmunized animals. However, this drug-related hypersensitivity may be independently prevented by (1) increasing the immunogen dose and/or (2) desensitizing animals with folate-FITC during vaccination. In addition, such manipulation in vivo did not appear to negatively alter the effectiveness of immunotherapy. This study provided confidence on the safety of folate-hapten-targeted cancer immunotherapy in an actively immunized host.
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