The advantages of bivalent hapten-bearing peptides for the detection of tumours pretargeted with bispecific antibodies have been demonstrated. This technology is now considered for radioimmunotherapy and bivalent haptens designed to target I-131 are needed. We thus synthesised a series of tyrosine-containing peptides bearing the histamine-hemisuccinate hapten. These molecules were tested for their ability to bind simultaneously two anti-hapten antibody molecules. One of these bivalent haptens, AG3.0, with a lysyl-D-tyrosyl-lysine connecting chain, was found to have optimal binding characteristics and was thus selected for further investigations. AG3.0 was shown to efficiently deliver radioactive iodine to human colorectal tumours grafted in nude mice using an anti-carcinoembryonic antigen x anti-histamine-hemisuccinate bispecific antibody. AG3.0 was also targeted to human B lymphoma cells pretargeted with a bispecific antibody specific for membrane IgM. In this system, bivalent ligands such as F(ab ')(2) or IgG are rapidly internalised and covalently linked radioactive iodine is released from target cells as a result of intracellular catabolism. With the pretargeted iodine-labelled bivalent hapten, a fivefold increase in the intracellular activity retention time as compared to I-125-labelled F(ab ')(2) and IgG was observed. The radiolabelled hapten did not undergo any degradation after internalisation. These results injected as a single 300 mu Cidose, 7 days after inoculation of 10(4)BCL(1) lymphoma cells in BALB/c mice, cured 14/16 of the animals and the treatment was well tolerated. Comparatively, the same dose of labelled IgG cured 13/16 of the mice but three mice died of haematologic toxicity. The same dose of labelled F(ab ')2 of Fab ' was completely inefficient. I-131-labelled bivalent haptens are now used in phase 1 radioimmunotherapy clinical trials.