Horneff G, Burmester G R, Emmrich F, Kalden J R
Max Planck Clinical Research Unit for Rheumatology/Immunology, Department of Medicine III, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, FRG.
Arthritis Rheum. 1991 Feb;34(2):129-40. doi: 10.1002/art.1780340202.
The effect of treatment with a monoclonal antibody against the CD4 antigen present on T helper cells was studied in 10 patients with severe intractable rheumatoid arthritis. In an open trial, monoclonal antibody 16H5 was infused at a dosage of 0.3 mg/kg of body weight on 7 consecutive days. Studies of the kinetics demonstrated a drastic depletion of CD4+ cells, to as low as 25 cells/microliters, 1 hour after the first infusion. The subsequent recovery of the CD4+ cell numbers 24 hours after infusion did not reach initial levels, and after the full 7-day treatment cycle there was a significant reduction of the number of CD4+ cells (mean +/- SD 51 +/- 28%; P less than 0.02). There was a reduced or even inverse CD4:CD8 ratio, which generally persisted 3-4 weeks. Lymphocyte transformation assays demonstrated significantly reduced reactivity in 5 of the 9 patients who completed the 7-day course, whereas 4 individuals exhibited an unexpected elevation in the T cell response to mitogens and common antigens. Parallel laboratory studies showed a significant decrease in the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (P less than 0.05), rheumatoid factor titer (P less than 0.04), and total immunoglobulin values (P less than 0.01), as well as a reduction in C-reactive protein levels, in 7 of the 9 patients. Clinically, there was a significant reduction in the Ritchie articular index (P less than 0.05) and in the number of swollen joints (P less than 0.04). Adverse effects were urticaria in 2 patients, which led to withdrawal of therapy in 1 of them, and chills with fever, suggestive of a lymphokine release syndrome, in another 2 patients. Only low levels of human anti-mouse immunoglobulin antibodies developed (not exceeding 1.7 mg/liter). It was therefore possible to repeat the treatment cycle, achieving still better efficacy, in 4 of the patients (reductions in the Ritchie index and the number of swollen joints P less than 0.02). Our findings indicate that treatment with monoclonal antibodies against the CD4 antigen leads to immunomodulation which results in clinical benefits, at least during initial observation periods (up to 6 months postinfusion). However, it remains to be determined whether long-term remission can be induced with this therapeutic approach. The use of immunosuppressive therapies or repeated antibody treatments will have to be considered.
在10例严重难治性类风湿关节炎患者中研究了用抗T辅助细胞上存在的CD4抗原的单克隆抗体进行治疗的效果。在一项开放性试验中,连续7天以0.3mg/kg体重的剂量输注单克隆抗体16H5。动力学研究表明,首次输注后1小时,CD4+细胞急剧减少,低至25个/微升。输注后24小时CD4+细胞数量的随后恢复未达到初始水平,在完整的7天治疗周期后,CD4+细胞数量显著减少(平均值±标准差为51±28%;P<0.02)。CD4:CD8比值降低甚至倒置,通常持续3 - 4周。淋巴细胞转化试验表明,在完成7天疗程的9例患者中有5例反应性显著降低,而4例个体对有丝分裂原和常见抗原的T细胞反应出现意外升高。平行的实验室研究显示,9例患者中有7例红细胞沉降率(P<0.05)、类风湿因子滴度(P<0.04)和总免疫球蛋白值(P<0.01)显著降低,以及C反应蛋白水平降低。临床上,里奇关节指数(P<0.05)和肿胀关节数量(P<0.04)显著减少。不良反应包括2例患者出现荨麻疹,其中1例因此停药,另外2例患者出现寒战伴发热,提示细胞因子释放综合征。仅产生了低水平的人抗鼠免疫球蛋白抗体(不超过1.7mg/升)。因此,4例患者能够重复治疗周期,疗效更佳(里奇指数和肿胀关节数量降低,P<0.02)。我们的研究结果表明,用抗CD4抗原的单克隆抗体治疗可导致免疫调节,至少在初始观察期(输注后长达6个月)可带来临床益处。然而,这种治疗方法能否诱导长期缓解仍有待确定。必须考虑使用免疫抑制疗法或重复抗体治疗。