The development of human antibodies recognising mouse immunoglobulins represents an obstacle to effective antibody therapy. This study shows that patients produce modest titres of antibodies (predominantly anti-mouse rather than anti-idiotypic) after a single low-dose injection for immunoscintigraphy, suggesting that repeated imaging with the same or a different antibody could be a problem. Fusion of the lymphocytes from a patient who had been imaged twice previously resulted in a monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to an IgG2b isotypic determinant. Anti-IgG2b antibodies predominated in this patient's serum. Production of human monoclonal antibodies from patients given mouse monoclonal antibodies not only allows a finer dissection of the immune repertoire but also provides possible reagents for controlling the human anti-(mouse Ig) response, for selection of class-switch variants of mouse monoclonal antibodies and enhancing tumour imaging.