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Query: DrugBank:BIOD00017 (
IFN-gamma
)
28,919
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A phase I trial involving continuous infusion of both beta- and gamma-interferon (IFN-beta and
IFN-gamma
) was conducted in 20 patients in order to determine whether combinations of high doses of IFN-beta and
IFN-gamma
were tolerable when administered under conditions which mimic conditions of in vitro antiproliferative studies. Patients received a 5-day continuous infusion of IFN-beta/
IFN-gamma
, followed by a 9-day rest period. Two cycles were administered. Doses of IFN-beta/
IFN-gamma
were escalated between 4 dose levels, with 5 patients per dose level. Dose-dependent side effects, consisting primarily of constitutional symptoms typical of those experienced with IFN, were observed. The maximally tolerated dose of continuous IFN-beta/
IFN-gamma
infusion was 3 x 10(6) units of IFN-beta and 200 micrograms of
IFN-gamma
. Dose-limiting side effects consisted of severe
headache
, fatigue, fever, and hepatic toxicity. No clinical responses were observed. Serum IFN was measurable only at the highest 3 dose levels. Only 5 patients (4 at the highest dose level) had total serum levels which exceeded 50 laboratory units/ml (55, 63, 800, 800, and 550 laboratory units/ml, respectively). In order to confirm the biological effectiveness of this schedule, we measured IFN-inducible proteins prior to therapy, 24 h after the initiation of the infusion, and at the completion of the 5-day infusion. 2'-5'-Oligoadenylate synthetase, serum beta 2-microglobulin, neopterin, and p78 levels all increased significantly, and serum tryptophan decreased significantly within 24 h after the initiation of treatment (P less than 0.0001). A dose-response effect was observed for serum beta 2-microglobulin, neopterin, and p78 (P less than 0.02). We retrospectively compared the results of this trial with those of another IFN-beta/
IFN-gamma
trial in which IFN-beta and
IFN-gamma
were administered by i.v. bolus. Within the limitations of a retrospective comparison, continuous infusion was less well tolerated than our previous schedule of bolus administration 3 times/week. However, the continuous infusion schedule appeared to be more effective in enhancing 2'-5'-oligoadenylate synthetase levels in mononuclear cells. We conclude that tolerable doses of IFN-beta and
IFN-gamma
do not result in serum IFN levels which produce significant synergistic antiproliferative responses in vitro. This study and other findings suggest that, unless higher doses can be achieved, combinations of IFN-beta and
IFN-gamma
are unlikely to have significant therapeutic activity.
...
PMID:Biological and clinical effects of the combination of beta- and gamma-interferons administered as a 5-day continuous infusion. 211 42
The antitumoral effect of gamma-Interferon (Re-
IFN-gamma
, KW-2202) on nine patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has been investigated. gamma-IFN was administered intravenously biweekly at a dose of 8-24 x 10(6) units/day for 5 consecutive days. As all patients had measurable disease determined by an abdominal CT, the antitumoral effect was evaluated by CT, according to the criteria of Koyama and Saito, During gamma-IFN therapy, one patient, who received a total of 4.4 x 10(8) units of gamma-IFN, achieved a partial response (PR) 133 days after onset of treatment. Another patient showed a minor response (MR) 43 days after start of therapy. The duration of the PR and MR were 7.8 weeks and 10.8 weeks, respectively. Two patients were assessed as having had no change (NC), and 5 patients as still manifesting a progressive disease (PD). Marked falls in serum alpha-fetoprotein levels during therapy were observed in 2 cases of which one was graded as having obtained a PR, and the other, a NC. The toxicities observed were fever, general malaise,
headaches
, and joint pains, which were slight and transient in most cases. In one case, however, a therapy was stopped because of a continuous and severe shoulder pain with no metastasis. Further studies on the use of IFN, possibly in combination with other chemotherapeutic agents, should be performed in patients with HCC.
...
PMID:[Antitumoral effect of gamma-interferon in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma]. 245 29
Six patients with hairy-cell leukemia were treated with gamma-(
IFN-gamma
) and alpha-(IFN-alpha-2b) interferon; 3-35 months following splenectomy, treatment was started with 4 X 10(6) U/m2
IFN-gamma
sc (iv) every second day for 9-35 weeks. Although the white blood cell counts decreased during therapy from 4.1-49 X 10(9)/l to 1.5-43 X 10(9)/l, no hematological or clinical improvement was obtained. Subsequently (interval 0-13 weeks), IFN-alpha-2b was given at an initial dose of 4 X 10(6) U/m2 sc every second day to all patients. After a treatment period corresponding to that of
IFN-gamma
administration, a significant hematological improvement was observed in five patients (one early death due to pulmonary embolism). At the last follow-up (9-14 months after start of treatment; maintenance therapy, 1 X 10(6) U every second day), these patients exhibited normal peripheral blood cell counts, and in bone marrow biopsy specimens a marked decrease of hairy cells was seen (1 CR, 3 PR, 1 MR). Adverse reactions including fever,
headache
, nausea, dryness of the mouth, myalgia, and fatigue did not significantly differ between the two interferon preparations. Whereas
IFN-gamma
is unlikely to have any significant impact on the course of hairy cell leukemia, IFN-alpha-2b does result in improvement of hematological values and well-being in almost all patients.
...
PMID:[Effectiveness of gamma interferon and alpha interferon in hairy cell leukemia]. 311 51
A Phase I trial was conducted to investigate the clinical toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and chemiluminescence (CL) responses of alveolar macrophages (AMs), peripheral blood neutrophils, and monocytes after subcutaneous injection of recombinant interferon-gamma (rIFN-gamma). Six patients with lung cancer received rIFN-gamma subcutaneously as single doses of 0.2, 0.6, and 1.8 mg. Bronchoalveolar lavage was performed three times: 21 h before as well as 6-7 and 27 h after injection. Serum samples were taken five times during the 27-h follow-up. IFN concentrations were measured from alveolar epithelial lining fluid (ELF) and serum by using an antiviral bioassay.
IFN-gamma
was not detectable in ELF after subcutaneous injection. AMs did not effect an increase in CL responses to N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine or to phosphate-buffered saline. Circulating
IFN-gamma
was detectable at 3-12 h after an injection of 1.8 mg of rIFN-gamma, the highest dose given. CL responses of peripheral blood monocytes increased in all patients after injection, whereas the responses of neutrophils were less clear-cut. All patients developed systemic side effects such as transient fever, nausea,
headaches
, and flu-like symptoms. The findings suggest that rIFN-gamma passes poorly from the blood to the pulmonary alveoli. On the basis of this and our previous findings of increased CL responses in AMs and measurable IFN concentrations in ELF after inhalation of rIFN-gamma, we recommend inhalation rather than the parenteral route of
IFN-gamma
for the treatment of respiratory diseases.
...
PMID:Subcutaneously administered recombinant interferon-gamma in humans: pharmacokinetics and effects on chemiluminescence responses of alveolar macrophages, blood neutrophils, and monocytes. 806 1
This investigation is devoted to the study of the time-course of a cytokines panel (IL-4, IL-6,
IFN-gamma
, GM-CSF) in plasma samples from migraine patients. The data obtained during challenged migraine crises was compared to the baseline values. Time-data series analysis showed a fall after a challenge test for IL-4 and IL-6 plasma levels and an opposite trend for gamma-IFN and GM-CSF levels. The implication of this phenomenon in dietary migraine is not readily evident. There may possibly be an activation of this cytokine network together with the well-known impairment in the neuropeptidergic system, considering the close links between interleukins and other cytokines and the neuro-mediators of pain, such as histamine and 5-HT.
Headache
PMID:Disruption of the immunopeptidergic network in dietary migraine. 829 90
Thirty-two patients suffering from migraine without aura were assessed during in interictal period to evaluate the contribution of cytokines to the pathophysiology of migraine. To this end, plasma levels of
IFN-gamma
, IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10 were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) techniques. Plasma levels of both
IFN-gamma
and IL-10 were not increased in the patients and did not differ significantly from healthy controls. Of interest, we observed a strong increase of IL-5 levels in 84.3% as well as increased IL-4 levels in 37.5% of patients with migraine without aura. These results suggests a preferential enhancement of some Th2-type cytokines, and may support the growing arguments of an immunoallergic mechanism in the pathophysiology of migraine.
Headache
1998 Jun
PMID:Cytokines and migraine: increase of IL-5 and IL-4 plasma levels. 966 52
A Phase I dose escalation trial of i.v. administered recombinant human interleukin 12 (rhIL-12) was performed to determine its toxicity, maximum tolerated dose (MTD), pharmacokinetics, and biological and potential antineoplastic effects. Cohorts of four to six patients with advanced cancer, Karnofsky performance >/=70%, and normal organ function received escalating doses (3-1000 ng/kg/day) of rhIL-12 (Genetics Institute, Inc.) by bolus i.v. injection once as an inpatient and then, after a 2-week rest period, once daily for five days every 3 weeks as an outpatient. Therapy was withheld for grade 3 toxicity (grade 4 hyperbilirubinemia or neutropenia), and dose escalation was halted if three of six patients experienced a dose-limiting toxicity (DLT). After establishment of the MTD, eight more patients were enrolled to further assess the safety, pharmacokinetics, and immunobiology of this dose. Forty patients were enrolled, including 20 with renal cancer, 12 with melanoma, and 5 with colon cancer; 25 patients had received prior systemic therapy. Common toxicities included fever/chills, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, and
headache
. Fever was first observed at the 3 ng/kg dose level, typically occurred 8-12 h after rhIL-12 administration, and was incompletely suppressed with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Routine laboratory changes included anemia, neutropenia, lymphopenia, hyperglycemia, thrombocytopenia, and hypoalbuminemia. DLTs included oral stomatitis and liver function test abnormalities, predominantly elevated transaminases, which occurred in three of four patients at the 1000 ng/kg dose level. The 500 ng/kg dose level was determined to be the MTD. This dose, administered by this schedule, was associated with asymptomatic hepatic function test abnormalities in three patients and an onstudy death due to Clostridia perfringens septicemia but was otherwise well tolerated by the 14 patients treated in the dose escalation and safety phases. The T1/2 elimination of rhIL-12 was calculated to be 5.3-9.6 h. Biological effects included dose-dependent increases in circulating
IFN-gamma
, which exhibited attenuation with subsequent cycles. Serum neopterin rose in a reproducible fashion regardless of dose or cycle. Tumor necrosis factor alpha was not detected by ELISA. One of 40 patients developed a low titer antibody to rhIL-12. Lymphopenia was observed at all dose levels, with recovery occurring within several days of completing treatment without rebound lymphocytosis. There was one partial response (renal cell cancer) and one transient complete response (melanoma), both in previously untreated patients. Four additional patients received all proposed treatment without disease progression. rhIL-12 administered according to this schedule is biologically and clinically active at doses tolerable by most patients in an outpatient setting. Nonetheless, additional Phase I studies examining different schedules and the mechanisms of the specific DLTs are indicated before proceeding to Phase II testing.
...
PMID:Phase I evaluation of intravenous recombinant human interleukin 12 in patients with advanced malignancies. 981 99
CPG 7909, a 24-mer B-Class CpG oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN), was tested for safety, tolerability and its ability to augment the immunogenicity of a commercial trivalent killed split influenza vaccine (Fluarix containing A/Beijing/262/95, A/Sydney/5/97 and B/Harbin/7/94; SmithKline Beecham) in a phase Ib blinded, randomized, controlled clinical trial. Sixty healthy volunteers were recruited in two consecutive cohorts of 30 subjects, who were randomly assigned to receive Fluarix plus 1mg CPG 7909 or Fluarix plus saline control (15 subjects each). Vaccines were administered by intramuscular injection on a single occasion with subjects in the first cohort receiving a 1/10th dose of Fluarix and those in the second cohort receiving the full-dose. All safety measures including physical evaluation, laboratory blood assays, and assays for DNA autoimmunity were within normal values except for transient and clinically inconsequential decreases in total white blood cell counts in groups receiving CPG 7909. All vaccines were found to be generally well tolerated with similar frequency and intensity for most adverse reactions for groups receiving CPG 7909 as controls. Exceptions were injection site pain and
headache
, which were reduced in frequency in subjects receiving the 1/10th Fluarix dose without CpG, compared to the frequency in all other groups. There was a lack of pre-existing immunity, defined as hemagglutinin inhibition (HI) activity < or =20, for all subjects to the influenza strains A/Beijing/262/95 and B/Harbin/7/94 and for some subjects to A/Sydney/5/97. Post-vaccination humoral immune responses, as determined 2 and 4 weeks later by assay of HI activity and ELISA to detect antibodies against hemagglutinin (anti-HA) were similar for both full and reduced Fluarix doses but the cellular immune responses (measured as PBMC antigen-specific
IFN-gamma
secretion) were reduced in the 1/10th Fluarix dose group. Humoral responses were not significantly enhanced by the addition of CPG 7909, except in individuals with pre-existing immunity to A/Sydney/5/97 strain (baseline HI activity titre >20), where there was a trend to higher HI activity with CPG 7909 (P = 0.06). The addition of CPG 7909 to the 1/10th dose of Fluarix did however result in significantly higher levels of
IFN-gamma
secretion from peripheral blood mononuclear cells recovered at 4 weeks and restimulated ex vivo with A/Beijing/262/95 (P = 0.048) and B/Harbin/7/94 (P = 0.0057), restoring these to the level seen with full-dose vaccine. These results suggest that addition of CPG 7909 to Fluarix may allow the use of reduced vaccine doses without reduced immunogenicity.
...
PMID:Safety and immunogenicity of CPG 7909 injection as an adjuvant to Fluarix influenza vaccine. 1529 66
In order to predict the clinical benefit of interferon-beta (IFN-beta) to patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), the following markers were investigated; (1) chronological change of cytokines (
IFN-gamma
, TNF-alpha, IL-6, IL-10, and TGF-beta) after administration of IFN-beta, (2) untoward effects of IFN-beta such as
headache
and arthralgia, (3) backgrounds of the patients such as age and relapse rate, (4) efficacy of IFN-beta therapy assessed by the change of relapse rate and progression of disability. Chronological blood sampling was performed 0, 10, and 24 h after injection of IFN-beta. The increase of serum IL-6 level in response to IFN-beta administration was associated with
headache
, arthralgia, relapse rate before treatment, and disability score at the initiation of the therapy. Significant association of change of serum TNF-alpha with age and
headache
was also observed. The important finding in this study was that patients with a transient increase in IL-6 in response to IFN-beta showed a slow disease progression. This result suggests that this transient increase in the serum IL-6 predicts favorable response to IFN-beta treatment.
...
PMID:Beneficial effect of interferon-beta treatment in patients with multiple sclerosis is associated with transient increase in serum IL-6 level in response to interferon-beta injection. 1716 13
Headache
and/or migraine, a common problem in pediatrics and internal medicine, affect about 5% to 10% children and adolescents, and nearly 30% of middle-aged women.
Headache
is also one of the most common clinical manifestations of acquired Toxoplasma gondii infection of the central nervous system (CNS) in immunosuppressed subjects. We present 11 apparently nonhuman immunodeficiency virus-infected children aged 7 to 17 years (8 girls, 3 boys) and 1 adult woman with recurrent severe
headaches
in whom latent chronic CNS T. gondii infection not manifested by enlarged peripheral lymph nodes typical for toxoplasmosis, was found. In 7 patients, the mean serum IgG Toxoplasma antibodies concentration was 189 +/- 85 (SD) IU/mL (range 89 to 300 IU/mL), and in 5 other subjects, the indirect fluorescent antibody test titer ranged from 1:40 to 1:5120 IU/mL (n= <1:10 IU/mL). Some of the patients suffered also from atopic dermatitis (AD) and were exposed to cat and/or other pet allergens, associated with an increased IL-4 and decreased
IFN-gamma
production. These cytokine irregularities caused limited control of cerebral toxoplasmosis probably because IL-4 down-regulated both the production of
IFN-gamma
and its activity, and stimulated production of a low NO-producing population of monocytes, which allowed cysts rupture, increased parasite multiplication and finally reactivation of T. gondii infection. The immune studies performed in 4 subjects showed a decreased percentage of T lymphocytes, increased total number of lymphocytes B and serum IgM concentration, and impaired phagocytosis. In addition, few of them had also urinary tract diseases known to produce IL-6 that can mediate immunosuppressive functions, involving induction of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10. These disturbances probably resulted from the host protective immune reactions associated with the chronic latent CNS T. gondii infection/inflammation. This is consistent with significantly lower enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) activity reported in atopic than in nonatopic individuals, and an important role that IDO and tryptophan degradation pathways plays in both, the host resistance to T. gondii infection and its reactivation. Analysis of literature information on the subjects with different types of
headaches
caused by foods, medications, and other substances, may suggest that their clinical symptoms and changes in laboratory data result at least in part from interference of these factors with dietary tryptophan biotransformation pathways. Several of these agents caused
headache
attacks through enhancing NO production via the conversion of arginine to citrulline and NO by the inducible nitric oxide synthase enzyme, which results in the high-output pathway of NO synthesis. This increased production of NO is, however, quickly down-regulated by NO itself because this biomolecule can directly inactivate NOS, may inhibit Ia expression on
IFN-gamma
-activated macrophages, which would limit antigen-presenting capability, and block T-cell proliferation, thus decreasing the antitoxoplasmatic activity. Moreover, NO inhibits IDO activity, thereby suppressing kynurenine formation, and at least one member of the kynurenine pathway, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, has been shown to inhibit NOS enzyme activity, the expression of NOS mRNA, and activation of the inflammatory transcription factor, nuclear factor-kB. In addition, the anti-inflammatory cytokines IL-4 and IL-10, TGF-beta, and a cytokine known as macrophage deactivating factor, have been shown to directly modulate NO production, sometimes expressing synergistic activity. On the other hand, IL-4 and TGF-beta can suppress IDO activity in some cells, for example human monocytes and fibroblasts, which is consistent with metabolic pathways controlled by IDO being a significant contributor to the proinflammatory system. Also, it seems that idiopathic intracranial hypertension, pseudotumor cerebri, and aseptic meningitis, induced by various factors, may result from their interference with IDO and inducible nitric oxide synthase activities, endogenous NO level, and cytokine irregularities which finally affect former T. gondii status 2mo in the brain. All these biochemical disturbances caused by the CNS T. gondii infection/inflammation may also be responsible for the relationship found between neurologic symptoms, such as
headache
, vertigo, and syncope observed in apparently immunocompetent children and adolescents, and physical and psychiatric symptoms in adulthood. We therefore believe that tests for T. gondii should be performed obligatorily in apparently immunocompetent patients with different types of
headaches
, even if they have no enlarged peripheral lymph nodes. This may help to avoid overlooking this treatable cause of the CNS disease, markedly reduce costs of hospitalization, diagnosis and treatment, and eventually prevent developing serious neurologic and psychiatric disorders.
...
PMID:Recurrent headache as the main symptom of acquired cerebral toxoplasmosis in nonhuman immunodeficiency virus-infected subjects with no lymphadenopathy: the parasite may be responsible for the neurogenic inflammation postulated as a cause of different types of headaches. 1730 77
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