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Benefits, limits & ethical issues of monoclonal antibodies - Higher

Benefits

can be designed to bind to, and identify, almost any substance. They can be used for many purposes:

  • testing for pregnancy by detecting HCG hormones in urine
  • testing for diseases such herpes and chlamydia, and which can lead to the development of
  • to treat conditions like cancer by carrying drugs directly to the tumour cells, and helping the attack them
  • monoclonal antibodies can be produced quickly despite the fact that it can be time consuming when they are made for the first time

Limitations

The human body is very complicated. Scientists originally thought that monoclonal antibodies would be a 'magic bullet' and would be able to identify and treat many medical conditions. Tests have revealed, however, that this is not the case. The interactions in the human body has resulted in unwanted side effects. This means they are not as widely used by doctors as originally thought.

Monoclonal antibodies are also very expensive to produce.

Ethical issues

An issue is one in which people disagree for religious or other moral reasons. The first step in making a monoclonal antibody is to inject a mouse with an . After it has produced , a small operation removes spleen cells, which then continue make the antibodies. Some people disagree with this use of animals to produce monoclonal antibodies

In 2006 a drug trial involving humans using monoclonal antibodies to treat conditions such as and went wrong. Despite the individuals being given very low doses, it resulted in organ failure but was not fatal. The monoclonal antibodies had been safely used in other animal trials before being used in human trials. This is an example of how careful we must be during drug development.