Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: DrugBank:BIOD00082 (IL-2)
29,198 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Published data indicate that when recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) is administered to children as a 15-min i.v. bolus, doses of 18 x 10(6) IU/m2 are poorly tolerated, requiring intensive care unit (ICU) management of IL-2-induced hypotension. We administered rIL-2 as a 1- or 2-h i.v. infusion to 11 children with malignancies refractory to conventional therapy. IL-2 was given every Monday/Wednesday/Friday for 3 weeks. Four children received 12 x 10(6) IU/m2/dose, four received 18 x 10(6) IU/m2/dose, and three received 24 x 10(6) IU/m2/dose (1 Cetus Unit = 6 IU). Fever, chills, flushing, nausea, vomiting, transient weight gain, and oliguria were observed at all three dose levels (not dose-limiting toxicities). Cardiovascular toxicity was significantly reduced compared to the bolus regimen. Mild hypotension was observed at all three dose levels; however, there was no severe dose-limiting hypotension. Because of reduced cardiovascular toxicity, IL-2 was safely administered on an outpatient basis. This regimen induced marginal transient increases in natural killer cell activity and lymphokine-activated killer cell activity. No measurable clinical tumor response was observed in any of the 11 children. The maximum-tolerated dose has not been reached. This regimen allows for a considerable cost reduction (outpatient care instead of ICU care) and safety, making further clinical trials on the use of IL-2 in children more feasible.
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PMID:Phase I study of recombinant human interleukin-2 for pediatric malignancies: feasibility of outpatient therapy. A Pediatric Oncology Group Study. 150 55

Interleukin (IL)-2 therapy leads to respiratory dysfunction due to increased vascular permeability. This study examines the role of the chemoattractant, immunomodulator, and permeability-promoting agent leukotriene (LT) B4 in this setting. Sheep with chronic lung lymph fistulae were given IL-2, 10(5) U/kg as an IV bolus (n = 6). Within 2 hours this led to a significant increase in LTB4 levels in both plasma and lung lymph. The mean pulmonary artery pressure (MPAP) rose while the pulmonary artery wedge pressure was unchanged. Arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) fell. Lung lymph flow (QL) was tripled (P less than 0.05) at 3 hours, coinciding with an increase in the lymph/plasma (L/P) protein ratio (P less than 0.05) resulting in an increase in the lymph protein clearance (P less than 0.05), data documenting increased microvascular permeability to protein. Mild leukopenia and thrombocytopenia (P less than 0.05) occurred. Body temperature rose and shaking chills were common. Pretreatment with the lipoxygenase inhibitor diethylcarbamazine (DEC; n = 6) reduced baseline plasma LTB4 levels and prevented the IL-2-induced increases in LTB4 in plasma and lung lymph (P less than 0.05). In contrast to IL-2 treatment alone, DEC blunted the increase in MPAP and prevented the rises in QL (P less than 0.05), L/P protein ratio (P less than 0.05), and lymph protein clearance (P less than 0.05). DEC also prevented the IL-2-induced leukopenia, the fall in platelet count, and the rise in body temperature (P less than 0.05, respectively). Infusion of IL-2 excipient control (n = 5) did not affect plasma or lymph LTB4 levels but there were mild increases in MPAP (P less than 0.05). The QL also rose but this occurred while the L/P protein ratio fell (P less than 0.05). Body temperature rose moderately. The PaO2, leukocyte, and platelet counts were unaffected. These data indicate that IL-2 administration leads to pulmonary dysfunction manifest by pulmonary hypertension and increased vascular permeability, events associated with LTB4 synthesis and prevented by DEC. Leukotriene B4 appears therefore to mediate the IL-2-induced lung injury.
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PMID:Interleukin-2-induced lung permeability is mediated by leukotriene B4. 217 70

Autologous lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and recombinant human interleukin-2 (rIL-2) were administered intraperitoneally (IP) to 24 patients with malignancies limited to the peritoneal space. Ten patients had ovarian cancer, 12 had colorectal cancer, and one patient each had endometrial carcinoma and primary small-bowel adenocarcinoma. All ovarian cancer patients, three of twelve colorectal cancer patients, and one patient with endometrial carcinoma had received prior therapy. Patients received IL-2 100,000 U/kg every 8 hours intravenously (IV) for 3 days, and 2 days later underwent daily leukapheresis for 5 days. LAK cells were generated in vitro by incubating the peripheral blood mononuclear cells in IL-2 for 7 days and were then administered IP daily for 5 days through a Tenckhoff catheter (Davol, Inc, Cranston, RI) together with IL-2 25,000 U/kg IP every 8 hours. All but one patient completed at least one cycle of therapy. Toxic side effects included minor to moderate hypotension, fever, chills, rash, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and distension, diarrhea, oliguria, fluid retention, thrombocytopenia, and minor elevations of liver function tests; all of these rapidly improved after discontinuation of IL-2. One patient had a grand mal seizure, and one suffered a colonic perforation; these were felt to be treatment-related. IP fibrosis developed in 14 patients and limited repeated cyclic administration of this therapy in five patients. Two of 10 (20%) ovarian cancer patients and five of 12 (42%) colorectal cancer patients had laparoscopy- or laparotomy-documented partial responses. We conclude that LAK cells and rIL-2 can be administered IP to cancer patients, resulting in moderate to severe short-term toxicity and modest therapeutic efficacy. Further investigation of this form of adoptive immunotherapy modified to address the problem of IP fibrosis and with lower IP IL-2 doses is justified by these initial results.
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PMID:Intraperitoneal lymphokine-activated killer-cell and interleukin-2 therapy for malignancies limited to the peritoneal cavity. 221 99

A murine IgG1 antibody specific for the IL-2-binding site on the human lymphocyte IL-2 receptor beta chain (CD25) was evaluated in 11 patients who developed acute graft-versus-host disease following allogeneic marrow transplantation. All patients had received cyclosporine and methotrexate for prophylaxis of GVHD, either alone (4 cases), or in combination with antithymocyte globulin (4 cases) or with prednisone (3 cases). Patients had developed GVHD at 7-53 days (median 12) after transplantation and had failed treatment with corticosteroids for 3-44 days (median 19). Residual GVHD was of grade II severity in 4 patients, grade III in 5 patients, and grade IV in 2 patients. Sequential patients received monoclonal antibody in escalating doses from 0.1 mg/kg/day to 1.0 mg/kg/day for 7 days. Side effects were fever, respiratory distress, hypertension, hypotension, and chills occurring in 11 of 72 (14%) antibody infusions. Trough antibody levels greater than 6 micrograms/ml were achieved in patients treated with 0.5 or 1.0 mg/kg/day. Four of eight evaluable patients had an IgM antibody response, and one had an IgG response to the murine immunoglobulin. Clinical response of GVHD was evaluated in 10 patients who received the entire course of the antibody treatment. Among 7 patients treated within 40 days from transplantation, one patient had a complete response in the skin as the only involved organ, and 3 patients had a partial response, 2 in the skin and one in the gastrointestinal tract. No responses were achieved with liver disease at anytime or in any organ in patients treated beyond 40 days after transplantation. Since administration of this antibody was well tolerated and some efficacy was observed in patients with acute GVHD treated early after transplantation, there is a rationale for testing this antibody as an agent for prophylaxis of GVHD.
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PMID:A phase I-II study evaluating the murine anti-IL-2 receptor antibody 2A3 for treatment of acute graft-versus-host disease. 236 50

Recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) (NSC# 600664; Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., Nutley, NJ) was studied in a phase I clinical trial in 33 patients with advanced, measureable cancer of the colon or malignant melanoma, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status O-1, and no prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy. The goal of the study was to identify a dose and schedule of IL-2 to generate maximal immune modulation with tolerable toxicity. Such a regimen might allow the addition of other treatment modalities and/or prolonged treatment duration in later trials. Each patient received IL-2 as a continuous 24-hour infusion once weekly for 4 weeks and then twice weekly for 4 weeks. Five treatment groups received from 10(3) U/m2 to 3 x 10(7) U/m2 per 24-hour infusion. The maximal tolerated dose was 3 x 10(7) U/m2/d twice weekly. Patients treated twice weekly at 1 x 10(7) and 3 x 10(7) U/m2/d had immune modulation in terms of lymphocytosis, eosinophilia, increased natural killer (NK) activity, and elevated numbers of peripheral blood mononuclear cells expressing CD16, OKT10/Leu-17, and Leu-19 surface markers. Endogenous generation of peripheral blood lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity was demonstrated by lysis of NK-resistant Daudi targets, in patients treated at 3 x 10(7) U/m2/d. Biochemical and hematological abnormalities were moderate and reversible. Clinical toxicity included hypotension, myalgia, arthralgia, stomatitis, fever, fatigue, nausea, headache, chills, diarrhea, and oliguria at high doses. Cardiovascular toxicity was tolerable for most patients and reversed after IL-2 was stopped. Two of six melanoma patients at 3 x 10(7) U/m2/d achieved partial responses by the end of the eighth week. This IL-2 schedule appears to produce potentially clinically useful immune enhancement with tolerable toxicity.
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PMID:A phase I clinical trial of recombinant interleukin-2 by periodic 24-hour intravenous infusions. 278 32

Interleukin (IL)-2 administration leads to respiratory dysfunction due to increased vascular permeability. This study examines the role of thromboxane (Tx)A2 in IL-2 induced lung injury in sheep with chronic lung lymph fistulae. This preparation enables evaluation of permeability prior to the development of gross edema. IL-2, 10(5) units/kg (n = 6), or its excipient control (n = 5) was given as an i.v. bolus over 2 min. After 2 h of IL-2 administration, plasma TxB2 increased from 168 to 388 pg/ml (P less than 0.05) and lung lymph TxB2 from 235 to 694 pg/ml (P less than 0.05). Mean pulmonary artery pressure (MPAP) rose from 13 to 29 mm of Hg (P less than 0.05) at 30 min and remained elevated for 4 h while the pulmonary artery wedge pressure was unchanged at 4 mm of Hg. Arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) fell from 88 to 77 mm of Hg (P less than 0.05). Lung lymph flow (QL) rose from 2.2 to 3.8 ml/30 min (P less than 0.05) at 1 h and to 6.4 ml/30 min at 3 h. This rise coincided with an increase in the lymph/plasma (L/P) protein ratio from 0.67 to 0.77 (P less than 0.05). In contrast, the non-IL-2-infused sheep (n = 3) recruitment of the lung vasculature by left atrial balloon inflation led to a rise in QL from 2.4 to 8.2 ml/30 min, whereas the L/P ratio declined from 0.62 to 0.25, suggesting that the protein-rich lymph flow after IL-2 administration reflected increased microvascular permeability. In further proof of an increase in permeability, IL-2 administration into sheep (n = 2) with an inflated left atrial balloon led, after a pressure-independent L/P protein ratio had been achieved, to an increase in L/P protein ratio and decrease in protein reflection coefficient. At 2 h after IL-2, the blood leukocyte count fell from 8156 to 4375/mm3 (P less than 0.05) primarily due to a 73% drop in lymphocytes. The platelet count declined from 292 to 184 x 10(3)/mm3 (P less than 0.05). Body temperature rose from 38.9-40.3 degrees C (P less than 0.05), and shaking chills were common. Pretreatment with the Tx synthetase inhibitor OKY 046 (n = 7) lowered baseline plasma and lymph TxB2 levels to 22 and 52 pg/ml (P less than 0.05) and prevented the IL-2-induced increase in plasma and lung lymph TxB2 (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Role of thromboxane in interleukin 2-induced lung injury in sheep. 278 52

Recombinant human interleukin-2 (rIL-2) was administered to 34 patients with advanced malignancy. Three schedules of rIL-2 administration employed were as follows: (A) 2-hr iv infusion of 6.7 X 10(5) U/m2/day (A1, 6 cases) or 2.2 X 10(6) U/m2/day (A2, 8 cases) for five consecutive days; (B) 24-hr continuous iv infusion of 3.3 X 10(5) U/m2/day (B1, 3 cases), 6.7 X 10(5) U/m2/day (B2, 7 cases) or 1.1 X 10(6) U/m2/day (B3, 5 cases) for 28 consecutive days; and (C) 24-hr continuous iv infusion of 6.7 X 10(5) U/m2/day (C, 5 cases) for 5 consecutive days per week for four weeks. The common side effects were fever (79%), eosinophilia (61%), malaise (56%), erythema or rash (50%), chills (38%) and nausea or vomiting (35%), with the dose-limiting toxicities being hypotension in group A, and renal dysfunction with fluid retention in groups B and C. In the case of 2-hr iv infusion, rIL-2 was rapidly cleared from the plasma, with a half life of about 30 min, while in the case of 24-hr continuous infusion, more than 1 U/ml serum IL-2 activity was maintained for 14 days in group B3. Natural killer (NK) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activities were augmented by rIL-2 administration in patients of groups A, B3 and C. In eight patients of group B, NK and LAK activities transiently decreased after rIL-2 administration, and recovered by day 3. The percentage of IL-2 receptor and Leu HLA-DR positive cells reached the peak level on day 7 in group B. In patients of group C, the percentage of Leu HLA-DR positive cells as well as NK and LAK activities increased upon rIL-2 administration and decreased during an intermission of two days. However, the percentage of rIL-2 receptor positive cells increased during the intermission of rIL-2. The most effective schedule of rIL-2 administration was considered to be the schedule of group C on the basis of this study.
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PMID:Three schedules of recombinant human interleukin-2 in the treatment of malignancy: side effects and immunologic effects in relation to serum level. 312 1

Seven patients with refractory stage III ovarian carcinoma were treated with escalating doses of human recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2) administered via the intraperitoneal (IP) route in an attempt to establish a dose and schedule of rIL-2 suitable for prolonged outpatient IP administration. Three patients went on to receive outpatient maintenance treatment twice weekly for 2-3 months. Doses ranged from 10(5) to 5 x 10(7) U/m2. The dose found most suitable for twice weekly outpatient IP administration was 10(6) U/m2. Dose-limiting toxicities consisted of diarrhea resulting in hypovolemia (5 patients) fever and chills (4 patients), nausea and vomiting (1 patient), mental status changes (2 patients), and azotemia (1 patient). These side effects were not prevented by indomethacin. Significant hypotension was not observed. Pharmacokinetic studies revealed extremely high IP concentrations of IL-2 which persisted for more than 24 hours. After a dose of 10(6) U/m2, the IP concentrations ranged from 670 to 760 U/ml. In one patient in whom concurrent serum concentrations were determined, the IP concentrations were over 100-fold higher than serum levels. After a dose of 10(7) U/m2, the IP concentrations of IL-2 ranged from 8700 to 14000. Concurrent serum levels in one patient revealed IP concentrations over 500-fold higher than serum levels. There were no consistent changes in T cell surface and activation markers on mononuclear cells from peripheral blood in 3 patients tested. Natural killer cell (NK) activity in peripheral blood increased in the three patients in whom it was measured. Four of the 7 patients progressed on treatment; 3 patients remained stable. We conclude that 10(6) U/m2 of rIL-2 is well-tolerated when administered by the IP route and that concentrations of IL-2 well in excess of that required to enhance cell-mediated cytotoxicity in vitro persist in the IP fluid for at least 24 hours.
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PMID:A phase I trial of intraperitoneal recombinant interleukin 2 in patients with ovarian carcinoma. 326 58

Previous experimental studies have suggested the possibility to modulate the biological activity and toxicity of cytokines by immunomodulating neurohormones. In particular, the pineal hormone melatonin (MLT) has been proven to amplify the immune effects of IL-2 and to reduce its toxicity. On this basis, we decided to investigate the effect of MLT on biological activity and toxicity of another important antitumor cytokine, TNF. The study was performed in 14 metastatic solid tumor patients, for whom no effective standard antitumor therapy was available. Informed consent was previously obtained from each patient. Patients were randomized to be treated with TNF or TNF plus MLT. Recombinant human TNF was given at a daily dose of 0.75 mg intravenously for 5 consecutive days. MLT was given orally at a daily dose of 40 mg, starting 7 days before TNF. Lymphocyte mean number observed at the end of TNF infusion was significantly higher in patients treated with TNF plus MLT than in those receiving TNF alone. On the contrary, no significant difference occurred in hemoglobin, platelet and neutrophil mean values. Asthenia and hypotension were significantly less frequent in patients treated with TNF plus MLT, whereas no difference occurred in the frequency of fever and chills. Even though limited to a small number of patients, this preliminary study would suggest the possibility to modulate TNF toxicity and biological activity by a concomitant treatment with the pineal hormone MLT.
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PMID:Preliminary study on modulation of the biological effects of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in advanced cancer patients by the pineal hormone melatonin. 775 92

In extensive preclinical testing, a CD3 x CD19 bispecific antibody (BsAb) induced killing of malignant B cells by resting T cells even in an autologous situation. In a 14 day clonogenic assay using a CD19+ pre-B cell line (REH), BsAb required repeated administration together with IL-2 to achieve a 5 log kill by resting peripheral blood T cells. Intravenously administered BsAb in an intrapatient dose escalation study of 3 patients with B cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma showed limited toxicity (WHO grade II fever and chills) due to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) release by T cells. Pharmacokinetics with 2.5 mg BsAb showed peak levels of 200-300 micrograms/ml and a t1/2 of 10.5 h. The next patient, with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), received 0.6 mg BsAb/m2 as an i.v. infusion preceded by 1 MU IL-2/m2 s.c. Improved T cell activation was noted, as indicated by an increase in IFN-gamma, IL-6, IL-8, and IL-10, in addition to high TNF-alpha increases. TNF-alpha increases were highest on the first day. Toxicity remained restricted to grade II fever and chills, observed every day after the infusion of BsAb. No clear clinical effects were seen in this chemotherapy-resistant CLL patient with a high tumor burden. If subsequent patients also show limited toxicity, treatment of patients with a lower tumor load seems to be warranted to evaluate the efficacy of CD3 x CD19 BsAb therapy.
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PMID:Clinical experience with CD3 x CD19 bispecific antibodies in patients with B cell malignancies. 858 81


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