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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (
breast cancer
)
160,383
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ex vivo activation of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) using interleukin-2 (IL-2) results in cytotoxic effector cells that may possess beneficial in vivo effects. We proposed to evaluate ex vivo stimulation of PBSC using various cytokines alone or in combination to optimize their function. Cytokine-activated PBSC were analyzed for tumor-directed cytotoxicity and their ability to remove tumor cells from long-term clonogenic assays. Mononuclear cells were obtained from the apheresis products of normal donors and cultured with IL-2 (1000 U/ml), interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) (1000 U/ml), or IL-12 (50 U/ml) either alone or in combinations at 37 degrees C and 5% CO(2) for 24 h. Colony-forming unit-tumor (CFUT) assays were initiated using cytokine-activated PBSC with varying concentrations of MCF-7 or SKBR-3 human
breast cancer
cells. Standard 4-h (51)Cr-release assays were performed with cytokine-activated PBSC using MCF-7 or SKBR-3 cells as targets. Activation of PBSC with IL-2,
IFN
-alpha, or IL-12 resulted in enhanced cytotoxicity against the two
breast cancer
cell lines when compared to controls. PBSC activated with IL-2 and
IFN
-alpha or IL-2 and IL-12 were more cytotoxic than PBSC activated with single cytokines (p = 0.0004 for MCF-7 cells and p < 0.001 for SKBR-3 cells). Using clonogenic assays, IL-2-activated PBSC reduced the number of CFU-T to a greater extent than did IL-12 or
IFN
-alpha-activated PBSC (p = 0.0006). However, PBSC activated with a combination of IL-2 and
IFN
-alpha or IL-2 and IL-12 demonstrated 95% and 90% reductions, respectively, compared to 79% reduction using IL-2-activated PBSC (p < 0.0001). The greatest reduction in cytotoxicity occurred in the cell populations depleted of CD56(+) cells (p = 0.016) and CD8(+) CD56(+) cells (p = 0.002), suggesting that the effector cell population includes a combination of cytotoxic CD8(+) T cells and CD56(+) natural killer cells. These results demonstrate that the ex vivo activation of PBSC with cytokines, either alone or in combination, enhances cytotoxicity against, and removal of two human
breast cancer
cells. The combinations of IL-2 with
IFN
-alpha or IL-12 are most beneficial in cytotoxicity and purging assays. These results could play an important role in designing adoptive cellular immunotherapy clinical trials in the autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant setting.
...
PMID:Ex vivo cytokine activation of peripheral blood stem cells: a potential role for adoptive cellular immunotherapy. 1135 75
HER2/neu-derived peptides inducing MHC class II-restricted CD4+ T helper lymphocyte (Th) responses, although critical for tumour rejection, are not thoroughly characterized. Here, we report the generation and characterization of CD4+ T cell clones specifically recognizing a HER-2/neu-derived peptide (776-788) [designated HER2(776-788)]. Such clones yielded specific proliferative and cytokine [gamma-interferon(
IFN
)-gamma] responses when challenged with autologous dendritic cells (DCs) loaded with HER2(776-788). By performing blocking studies with monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) and by using DCs from allogeneic donors sharing certain HLA-DR alleles, we found that HER2(776-788) is a promiscuous peptide presented, at least, by DRB5*0101, DRB1*0701 and DRB1*0405 alleles. One TCRV beta 6.7+ clone recognized the HLA-DRB5*0101+ FM3 melanoma cell line transfected with a full length HER-2/neu cDNA. Moreover, this clone recognized the HER-2/neu+ SKBR3
breast cancer
cell line induced to express HLA-DR, thus demonstrating that HER2(776-788) represents a naturally processed and presented epitope. Our data demonstrate that helper peptide HER2(776-788) represents a promiscuous epitope binding to at least three HLA-DR alleles, thus offering a broad population coverage. The use of antigenic peptides presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II in addition to those presented by class I may improve the therapeutic efficacy of active immunization.
...
PMID:Peptide HER2(776-788) represents a naturally processed broad MHC class II-restricted T cell epitope. 1172 Apr 40
Autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (auto-PBSCT) after high dose chemotherapy is usually offered to
breast cancer
patients carrying a high risk of relapse or having chemosensitive metastatic disease. Whether progression free and overall survival of such patients is improved after auto-PBSCT compared to conventional chemotherapy is a matter of debate. Currently available results of randomised trials could not uniformly prove or disprove auto-PBSCT being advantageous. Yet such studies have not employed any manipulation of the stem cell graft or any post-transplant immunomodulation exploiting the unique immunological environment for tumour eradication which exists only after auto-PBSCT. Preliminary data have discussed the ex vivo and in vivo generation of cytotoxic effector cells employing IL-2 and/or
IFN
-alpha/gamma in the auto-PBSCT setting. Other cytokines such as IL-12, IL-15 and prolactin have likewise been considered. Several anticancer vaccine protocols after auto-PBSCT are ongoing using monovalent vaccines or anti-idiotypic antibodies. Polyvalent anticancer vaccines, cytokine secreting tumour cells, tumour pulsed or hybridised dendritic cells (DC) enhanced with cytokines are studied. Monoclonal antibodies (mAb) could assist: unlabelled for pretransplant exvivo purging, post-transplant for enhancing antibody-dependent cell mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) or radioimmunoconjugated as an additive cytotoxic part of the conditioning regimen. Autologous graft versus host induction and allogeneic stem cell transplantation (probably with non-myeloablative conditioning followed by donor lymphocyte infusions) are other approaches. Evaluation of successful combinations, optimal dosages and appropriate timing schedules is the subject of future investigations. Since
breast cancer
patients belong to countless subgroups, a large number of protocols need to be addressed in order to avoid over treatment and prevent relapse.
...
PMID:Blood stem cell transplantation for breast cancer: new approaches using pre- peri- post-transplant immunotherapy. 1172 34
The present study analyses the influence of high-dose chemotherapy (HD) and autologous stem cell transplantation on natural and vaccine-induced specific immunity in
breast cancer
patients. Peripheral blood was collected from five
breast cancer
patients at serial time points in connection with treatment and in a follow-up period of 1 year. The frequencies of CD8+ and CD4+ T cells responsive to cytomegalovirus (CMV), varicella zoster virus (VZV), and tetanus in antigen-activated whole blood were determined by flow cytometric analysis of CD69, TNF alpha,
IFN
gamma and IL-4 expression. Mononuclear cells were labelled with PKH26 dye and the CMV, VZV, and tetanus toxoid-specific proliferation of T cell subpopulations was analysed by flow cytometry. In none of the patients did the treatment result in loss of overall T cell reactivity for any of the antigens. Prior to chemotherapy 5/5 patients possessed TNF alpha expressing T cells specific for CMV, 4/5 for VZV, and 3/5 for tetanus. One year after stem cell transplantation all patients possessed TNF alpha expressing T cells specific for CMV, VZV and tetanus. The highest percentages of cytokine-responding T cells were seen after stimulation with CMV antigen. In general, the lowest reactivity (close to zero) was measured in G-CSF-mobilised blood at the time of leukapheresis. In spite of a continuously reduced CD4 to CD8 ratio after transplantation, recovery of CD4+ T cells usually occurred prior to CD8+ recovery and often to a higher level. The study demonstrates that natural as well as vaccine-induced specific immunity established prior to HD can be regained after stem cell transplantation. These data indicate that introduction of a preventive cancer vaccination in combination with intensive chemotherapy may be a realistic treatment option.
...
PMID:Impact of high-dose chemotherapy on antigen-specific T cell immunity in breast cancer patients. Application of new flow cytometric method. 1218 Jan 10
We demonstrated before that primary operated
breast cancer
patients contain in their bone marrow (BM) cancer reactive memory T cells (MTC) which have to be re-activated to become tumor infiltrating effector cells. The aim of this study was to optimize an ex vivo stimulation protocol for MTC based on autologous dendritic cells (DC). As source of tumor antigens we used lysates from unmodified tumor cells or from tumor cells infected with Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV) which contain
IFN
-alpha inducing viral dsRNA as one danger signal. DC from
breast cancer
patients were pulsed with lysates from the MCF-7
breast cancer
line (Tu-L) or from NDV infected MCF-7 cells (TuN-L, viral oncolysates) and compared for stimulatory capacity in an ELISPOT response of autologous BM derived MTC. To analyze potential further danger signals derived from NDV infection, we employed MALDI mass spectrometry, Western blots, FACS cytometry and ELISA tests. DC pulsed with viral oncolysates showed increased expression of co-stimulatory molecules in comparison to Tu-L pulsed DC and induced significantly higher ELISPOT MTC responses. Supernatants from co-cultures of MTC and TuN-L pulsed DC contained increased titers of
IFN
-alpha and IL-15. NDV infection of tumor cells resulted in a number of differences in protein expression including a heat-shock protein (HSP27) which became phosphorylated. The results suggest that a DC preparation pulsed with viral oncolysate includes danger signals (e.g. dsRNA, cytokines, HSP molecules) and is superior for MTC stimulation to a DC preparation pulsed with lysate from non-infected tumor cells.
...
PMID:Dendritic cells pulsed with viral oncolysates potently stimulate autologous T cells from cancer patients. 1223 6
Dendritic cells (DC) and T cells were generated from Ficoll separated bone marrow (BM) mononuclear cells of primary operated
breast cancer
patients according to new cell culture protocols. BM-DC were capable of functioning as professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and of inducing autologous antigen-specific memory T-cell responses to either tetanus toxoid recall antigen or to
breast cancer
antigens. Treatment with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) resulted in phenotypic and functional maturation of BM-DC. When BM-DC, pulsed with
breast cancer
-associated tumor antigens, were cocultured with autologous patient-derived BM-T cells to allow for cognate
breast cancer
antigen recognition and stimulation, apoptosis of T cells-which occurred in noncognate coculture systems-was inhibited. Furthermore, in cocultures allowing for antigen-specific cognate interactions, the expression on BM-DC of CD83, MHC class II, CD40 and CD86 molecules was upregulated and the cytokines IL-12 and
IFN
-alpha were produced in significantly elevated amounts. Adoptive transfer of
breast cancer
-reactive memory T cells together with APCs into human
breast cancer
-bearing NOD/SCID mice caused a regression of the tumor and prolonged survival of the animals. This was not the case when such animals had been treated by transfer of reactivated BM T cells without BM-DCs. Our findings suggest that cognate interactions between cancer patient-derived memory BM-T cells and tumor antigen-presenting BM-DCs are important for reciprocal cell stimulation, survival and therapeutic activity.
...
PMID:Cognate interactions between memory T cells and tumor antigen-presenting dendritic cells from bone marrow of breast cancer patients: bidirectional cell stimulation, survival and antitumor activity in vivo. 1245 56
The project focuses on cancer types with outstanding publich health importance (breast-, colorectalhead and neck cancers and childhood tumors). Epidemiological studies revealed significant regional differences in the mobidity/mortality of these cancer types in Hungary. Molecular epidemiological studies revealed characteristic BRCA1 mutation patterns of familiar
breast cancer
and DNA repair enzyme polymorphism in head and neck cancer. New methods have been developed for the screening (lactoferrin), prognostication (c-met expression) or the prediction of therapeutic sensitivity (TS expression) of colorectal cancer. In the pediatric oncology program alternative way of MRD monitoring (WT1 expression) and a potential new therapeutic modality (
IFN
-alpha) of ALL was developed. Experimental studies demonstrated that the tumoral matrix significantly influences the effects of the classic chemotherapeutic agents. We have identified several genes the expression of which could serve efficiently as markers or targets for therapy of the progression of melanoma (alphaIIbbeta3 integrin, CD44v3 and decorin proteoglycans, AMF receptor).
...
PMID:[Report on the first year of the activity of the National Oncological RD Consortium]. 1256 51
Therapeutic antibodies directed against tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, and against the human EGF receptor-2 (HER2) receptor for the treatment of
breast cancer
have provided significant clinical benefit for the patients. The success of these antibodies has also provided strong support for the possibility that increased activity of cytokines or growth factors is causally implicated in a variety of human diseases. Interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) is induced by viruses (linked by epidemiological studies to autoimmune diseases), has significant direct effects on both epithelial cells and the immune system, and then can be further induced by the autoantibodies and apoptotic cells generated by the actions of
IFN
-alpha. The direct and deleterious impact on target tissues, the ability to induce an autoimmune response, and the potential for a self-sustaining cycle of induction and damage suggests that
IFN
-alpha could be a pivotal factor in the development of autoimmune diseases. This review will evaluate the rationale for, possible approaches to, and safety concerns associated with, targeting interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) as a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of autoimmune diseases. While the approach may be applicable to several autoimmune diseases, there will be an emphasis on systemic lupus erythematosus and insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Neutralizing interferon alpha as a therapeutic approach to autoimmune diseases. 1265 Dec 25
The development of cancer vaccines requires approaches to induce expansion and functional differentiation of tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) effectors which posses cytolytic capability and produce cytokines. Efficient induction of such cells is hindered by the poor immunogenicity of tumor antigens and by the poor transduction efficiency of dendritic cells (DCs) with current nonreplicating vectors. We have investigated the use of influenza A virus, a potent viral inducer of CTLs, as a vector expressing the immunodominant HER-2 CTL epitope KIF (E75). For this purpose, an attenuated influenza A/PR8/34 virus with a truncated nonstructural (NS1) gene was generated containing the E75 epitope in its neuraminidase protein (KIF-NS virus). Stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy donors and of tumor-associated lymphocytes from ovarian and
breast cancer
patients with DCs infected with KIF-NS virus (KIF-NS DC) induced CTLs that specifically recognized the peptide KIF and HER-2-expressing tumors in cytotoxicity assays and secreted gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) and interleukin-2 at recall with peptide. Priming with KIF-NS DCs increased the number of E75(+) CD45RO(+) cells by more than 10-fold compared to nonstimulated cells. In addition, KIF-NS virus induced high levels of
IFN
-alpha in DCs. This is the first report demonstrating induction of human epitope-specific CTLs against a tumor-associated antigen with a live attenuated recombinant influenza virus vector. Such vectors may provide a novel approach for tumor antigen delivery, lymphocyte activation, and differentiation in human cancer vaccine development.
...
PMID:Activation of tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) by human dendritic cells infected with an attenuated influenza A virus expressing a CTL epitope derived from the HER-2/neu proto-oncogene. 1280 40
Immunotherapy (biological therapy) comprises such things as active specific immunotherapy ("cancer vaccines"), nonspecific immunostimulation with cytokines, and the inhibition of suppressor influences exerted or elicited by the tumor. Just as cancer chemotherapy began with the use of single agents and evolved into combination therapy, so immunotherapeutic agents have been combined with each other and with chemotherapy. The alkylating agent cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan; CY) has been used for many years to inhibit tumor-derived suppressor influences in rodents, and has been exploited for the same use in humans. Combinations of CY and cancer vaccines such as autologous tumor cells, Melacine, large multivalent immunogen (LMI), and Theratope have been tested with some success in humans for more than a decade. In this use, the CY is a biological response modifier rather than an antitumor agent. Delayed treatment with CY in treating mouse plasmacytomas has proved more effective than immediate treatment, probably because it allows immunity to develop in the host. CY and moderate-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) have also been a useful regimen in treating human melanomas. IL-2 is itself a useful component of combination immunotherapy, such as with melanoma peptide vaccines, or with interferon-alfa-2b, (IFN-a), as a dual combination or part of a biochemotherapy regimen. IL-2 and histamine, to block reactive oxygen species, may be a more useful combination for treatment of liver metastases of melanoma than IL-2 alone. In this combination, the histamine may permit continued, unimpeded activity of cytolytic T lymphocytes. Several different combinations of drugs and biological agents have been used as biochemotherapy for melanoma, but although there are higher immediate response rates, the long-range survival benefits have been marginal, not justifying the severe toxicity. Combinations of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and
IFN
-a or levamisole have had efficacy in colon and head and neck cancers, but here the biological agents acted as biochemical modulators. Trials of antibodies and chemotherapy have been limited. It appears that trastuzumab (Herceptin) potentiates antitumor therapy in
breast cancer
and also increases the cardiotoxicity of those regimens.
...
PMID:Immunotherapy as part of combinations for the treatment of cancer. 1286 Jan 62
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