ANNOUNCER: One of the newest developments in the treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, or NHL, is radioimmunotherapy. At a Gilda's Club gathering in Chicago, this treatment was the main topic of discussion.
JOE BASHAW: In 1995 my wife was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's low grade lymphoma. I was also diagnosed with the same thing. Any time there's any opportunity to go anywhere to get information about the disease, treatments or what's on the horizon, we always try to go.
ANNOUNCER: Radioimmunotherapy uses drugs called monoclonal antibodies, which are similar to antibodies the immune system makes to fight infection. These antibodies have a radioactive component attached to them, which attacks a protein on the surface of a cancer cell and destroys the cell. Currently, radioimmunotherapy is primarily being used in the fight against NHL.
RUSSEL SCHILDER, MD: The reason radioimmunotherapy has been targeted right now for lymphoma is we have the right target, the CD20 antigen. It's limited to B-cells; lymphocytes and lymphoma cells are very sensitive to radiation therapy. So we've always wondered 'Gee it would be great if we could just radiate a lot of these different sites' but with so many normal tissue structures, if you radiate too much of the body, the toxicity becomes excessive. So this is a way, in fact of radiating the whole body without having to expose the same amount of normal tissue.