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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of this study was to evaluate whether interferon [IFN] can affect intracerebrally grown
glioma
and how alteration of the blood-brain barrier [BBB] may influence this effect. An intracerebrally implanted
glioma
G-26 (G-26) mouse brain-tumor model was developed and used in these studies. Histological characterization of this intracerebrally grown tumor revealed its anaplastic character. The astrocytic origin of G-26 was evidenced by glial fibrillary acidic protein staining and electron microscopic visualization of glial filaments. A study of tumor progression and animal survival showed development of a well defined tumor nodule within approximately seven days after the implantation. The median animal survival time was 27 +/- 3.8 days. The integrity of the blood-brain barrier [BBB] within the tumor was evaluated by the intravenous injection of horseradish peroxidase at days 3, 7, 10 and 20 after brain tumor implant and compared to 'sham' controls. The tumor-induced BBB alteration was progressive from day 3 to day 20.
Glioma
-26 subcutaneously passed in C57BL/6 mice was also continuously cultured in vitro. Its proliferation was inhibited by homologous mouse interferon alpha/beta [MuIFN alpha/beta] but not by human interferon alpha lymphoblastoid or human
interferon beta
. The in vivo studies of G-26
glioma
treatment with MuIFN alpha/beta were performed using single bolus of IFN in osmotically altered animals or slow IFN infusion through osmotic micro-pumps. The slow infusion of IFN had no effect on animal survival. However, a statistically significant increase in animal survival was observed after single bolus IFN treatment following osmotic BBB alteration.
...
PMID:Evaluation of blood-brain barrier permeability and the effect of interferon in mouse glioma model. 128 Dec 26
The cytotoxicity of human beta-interferon (HuIFN-beta) produced in human
glioma
cells was examined by use of our liposomes entrapping two plasmids, pSV2neo and pSVMTV-
IFN-beta
. After the cells had been transfected with these genes by means of the liposomes, neomycin-resistant cells were selected. When the selected cells were subjected to a single exposure to dexamethasone, all of the cells were found to produce HuIFN-beta and were eliminated by 8 days. Accordingly, the effect of HuIFN-beta produced in human
glioma
cells is considered to be cytocidal.
...
PMID:Cytotoxicity of human beta-interferon produced in human glioma cells transfected with its gene by means of liposomes. 129 Apr 60
We have employed IAR therapy [combination of postirradiation, chemotherapy and interferon (IFN)] for malignant
glioma
patients. Changes of lymphocyte fractions in patients were evaluated before and after IAR therapy, using a recently developed two-color analysis. Eight malignant
glioma
patients received irradiation, chemotherapy (ACNU) and immunotherapy (OK-432 and
IFN-beta
). Peripheral blood lymphocytes taken during hospitalization with IAR therapy (first half and latter half), and every 3 to 6 months for 2 years at the longest after IAR therapy were double-stained with FITC- and PI-labelled antibodies and two-color analysis was conducted by a FACS Analyzer. Six patients out of 8 survived for 6 months to 2 years, 2 died after 3 and 6 months, respectively. Leu-2a (suppressor/cytotoxic T), especially Leu-2a+ 15- (cytotoxic T) showed a high value. Leu-2a level decreased during treatment, and both Leu-2a+ 15- and Leu-2a+ 15+ (suppressor T) values decreased. Two thirds of the patients showing an increased Leu-2a+ 15+ level died. Leu 3a (helper/inducer T), especially Leu-3a+ 8+ (inducer T) level decreased, but Leu-3a+ 8- (helper T) level increased during treatment. The level decreased in the worse patients. Leu-3a/Leu-2a ratio was low, but it increased during treatment as compared with the results of conventional therapy. Leu-7, Leu-11a, NK activity, and gamma-IFN productivity were further studied. Treatment combined with IFN revealed an influence on the T cells resulting in an increase of helper T level and suppression of suppressor T level.
...
PMID:[Multidisciplinary therapy using interferon and immunological evaluation for glioma patients: two-color analysis of T cell subsets]. 170 57
We have applied restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis to a 30-member panel of primary
glioma
DNAs, which had been previously examined for loss of genetic information (C. D. James, E. Carlbom, J. P. Dumanski, M. Hansen, M. Nordenskjold, V. P. Collins, and W. K. Cavenee, Cancer Res., 48:5546-5551, 1988), to determine the frequency and sublocalization of loss of genetic information from chromosome 9. We have also utilized scanning densitometry for dosage determination of the 9p-localized interferon alpha and
interferon beta
-1 genes among these same tumors. Our results reveal the following: (a) for those cases in which loss has occurred, the region of common loss lies on the short (p) arm of the chromosome; (b) loss of genetic information from the short arm of chromosome 9 occurs frequently in
glial tumors
of intermediate (anaplastic, grade III) and high (glioblastoma, grade IV) histological malignancy (10 of 20 cases) but not in tumors of low (grade II) histological malignancy (0 of 10 cases); (c) tumors with 9p deletions are hemi- or nullizygous for
interferon beta
-1 and the interferon alpha gene cluster; (d) cases of interferon nullizygosity occur exclusively among tumors of highest histological malignancy (glioblastoma). These data, especially the determination of a region of nullizygosity, suggest proximity to or residence within a gene(s) whose function(s) is (are) critical to the suppression of the malignant evolution of
glial tumors
.
...
PMID:Chromosome 9 deletion mapping reveals interferon alpha and interferon beta-1 gene deletions in human glial tumors. 199 58
A multicenter phase I-II trial of intravenous (IV) human recombinant
interferon beta
(rIFN-beta; Betaseron; Triton Bioscience Inc, Almeda, CA) was conducted in children with recurrent or progressive primary brain and spinal cord tumors. A total of 29 patients were enrolled: high-grade astrocytoma (12), brainstem
glioma
(nine), and primitive neuroectadermal tumor (three), ependymoma (two), germ cell (two), and spinal cord astrocytoma (one). Betaseron was given by IV infusion over 30 minutes 3 times per week (Monday-Wednesday-Friday [MWF]). Four dose levels were studied, and at least three patients were entered at each dose level. The treatment plan began with a three-step dose escalation for each patient over 6 weeks (initiation phase). The dose-escalation schema for the four dose levels was: 50-100-200, 100-200-400, 200-300-500, and 300-400-600 x 10(6) (M) IU/m2. Patients experiencing an objective response or stable disease after 6 weeks entered the maintenance phase at the final escalated dose, ie, 200, 400, 500, or 600 mlU/m2 (MWF). Common transient effects included chills, fever, and fatigue. Dose-limiting toxicities were hematologic, hepatic, and CNS. The maintenance maximum-tolerable dose (MTD) was 500 mlU/m2, ie, dose level 3. Response was assessed at completion of the initiation phase and at 2-month intervals during the maintenance phase. Objective partial responses were seen in patients with high-grade astrocytoma (two) and brain-stem
glioma
(two). Thus, four of 21 (19%) assessable patients had partial responses for a median of 4 months. Eight patients had stable disease for a median of 5+ (2 to 14+) months. Antineoplastic activity has been identified in children with high-grade astrocytomas and brainstem gliomas in a dose-intensive regimen.
...
PMID:Recombinant interferon beta: a phase I-II trial in children with recurrent brain tumors. 201 20
The distribution of 125I-labelled recombinant mouse interferon-beta (rMuIFN-beta) in normal and
glioma
(203
glioma
) bearing mice was studied by radioassay and macro-autoradiography at 15 and 30 min after a single intravenous injection. The level of rMuIFN-beta in the spleen was about 20-fold higher than in serum. Concentrations higher than the serum level was detected in the lung, liver and kidney. The concentration of rMuIFN-beta in the brain was 8% of the serum level and the concentration in the
glioma
30 min after administration was about 10-fold higher than in normal mouse brain. Macro-autoradiographic study demonstrated a wide distribution range and selective uptake in
glioma
tissue. Furthermore, we found that mouse gliomas were sensitive to mouse
IFN-beta
. Our findings demonstrate that in the mouse
glioma
model, intravenously administered interferon reaches the tumour.
...
PMID:Distribution of mouse interferon-beta in normal and brain tumour-bearing mice. 206 66
Recombinant
interferon beta
(
IFN-beta
ser) has been administered by intravenous bolus injection three times weekly at a dose of 90 x 10(6) IU to 14 patients with recurrent malignant
glioma
in an ongoing study. The treatment period has ranged from 1 to 40 weeks. The most common adverse experiences were fever, chills, malaise, and headache. Fever, chills and headache were worse with the first two doses and were usually relieved with acetaminophen. All patients tolerated subsequent treatments without any difficulties. No neurologic or hematologic toxicities were observed. Of ten evaluable patients, five had progressive disease in 4 to 8 weeks; three had stable disease for 12 to 21 weeks; one has had a minor response for 13 weeks; and one has had a complete resolution of tumor for 150 + weeks.
IFN-beta
ser appears to have activity in human
glioma
and is well tolerated at this dosage and schedule.
...
PMID:A pilot study of recombinant interferon beta (IFN-beta ser) in patients with recurrent glioma. 208 58
The antiproliferative effects of human recombinant interferon-alpha (rIFN-alpha A) and interferon-beta (rIFN-beta ser) were assessed in vitro against seven human
glioma
cell lines. Further analysis of one of these lines (EFC-2) in response to rIFN-alpha A demonstrated a minimum growth inhibition by day 6 of treatment, whereas a 50% inhibition of cell growth was observed with a dose of 50 U/ml of
IFN-beta
ser. No significant growth inhibition was seen by rIFN-alpha A at doses up to 500 U/ml. Addition of rIFN-alpha A to rIFN-beta ser-treated EFC-2 cells neither suppressed nor augmented the antiproliferative response to
IFN-beta
ser. The binding of 125I-labeled rIFN-alpha A or 125I-labeled rIFN-beta ser to EFC-2 cells was inhibited competitively by increasing concentrations of either unlabeled rIFN-alpha A or rIFN-beta ser. This suggests that the cellular receptors for both rIFN-alpha A and rIFN-beta ser appear to be intact and appear to bind both agents equally. Furthermore, incubation of EFC-2 cells for 72 h with either rIFN-alpha A or rIFN-beta ser resulted in an increase in 2',5'-oligoadenylate (2-5A) synthetase activity 5-fold with rIFN-alpha A and 50-fold with rIFN-beta ser. Similarly, the 68-kD IFN-induced protein kinase was induced substantially with rIFN-beta ser but only slightly induced with rIFN-alpha A treatment. These results suggest that EFC-2 human
glioma
cells demonstrate a differential sensitivity in terms of growth inhibition to rIFN-beta ser and to rIFN-alpha A which appears to correlate with a differential induction of both intracellular 2-5A synthetase and protein kinase activity. These results cannot be explained solely on the basis of surface receptor binding of rIFN-alpha A and rIFN-beta ser. These data do suggest that, for human
glioma
cells in culture, type I IFN receptors may display a subtle architectural variation that allows equivalent binding of both IFN-alpha and
IFN-beta
ser, but allows an enhanced signal transduction and biological effect only after binding a specific IFN subtype.
...
PMID:Growth inhibitory effects of interferon-beta but not interferon-alpha on human glioma cells: correlation of receptor binding, 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase and protein kinase activity. 214 Mar 95
We report that 5 of 19 human malignant
glioma
cell lines have neither interferon alpha (IFNA) nor
interferon beta
(
IFNB
) genes that are detectable by Southern blotting. Of 5 other of these malignant
glioma
lines that have a single
IFNB
gene copy, 3 lack the IFNA genes entirely and two have one copy. One of the lines that lacks the IFNA genes entirely but has one copy of the
IFNB
gene has a rearrangement near the
IFNB
gene that is most easily interpreted as an insertion of a large segment of DNA (at least 50 kilobases) the 3' end of which is less than 1.3 kilobases 5' to the known regulatory sequences of the
IFNB
gene. In spite of the rearrangement,
IFNB
-specific RNA is highly inducible in this line by poly(I)-poly(C). The ability of interferon alpha or
interferon beta
to inhibit cell growth does not depend upon the presence or absence of the respective gene. This finding adds solid tumors to those tumor cell lines (acute lymphocytic leukemia, chronic myelogeneous leukemia) previously determined to lack the IFNA and
IFNB
genes (Diaz et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 85:5259-5263, 1988).
...
PMID:Absence of IFNA and IFNB genes from human malignant glioma cell lines and lack of correlation with cellular sensitivity to interferons. 229 67
The therapeutic potential of interleukin 1 (IL-1) in the treatment of malignant
glioma
was investigated. The direct effect of recombinant human IL-1 beta (rHuIL-1 beta) on cultured U-373 MG
glioma
cell was evaluated in vitro by BrdU uptake assay, and these effects were compared with those of human
interferon beta
(HuIFN-beta). Though a growth inhibition and an increase of the percentage of process bearing cells were observed with rHuIL-1 beta at a concentration of 100 ng/ml, these in vitro effects of rHuIL-1 beta were less than those of HuIFN-beta at the same concentrations. Prevention of and enhanced recovery from myelosuppression caused by ACNU by rHuIL-1 beta were evaluated in BALB/c mice. Intravenous injection of ACNU at a dose of 60 mg/kg caused marked decreases in the number of leukocytes, neutrophils, reticulocytes and thrombocytes after seven days. Pretreatment with 1 microgram/mouse of rHuIL-1 beta as a single i.p. injection had a significant preventive effect on these myelosuppression including thrombocytopenia. Enhanced recovery by rHuIL-1 beta administrated seven days after injection of ACNU was also observed. Experimental combination immunochemotherapy with ACNU and rHuIL-1 beta was performed in nude mice inoculated with human glioblastoma subcutaneously. More than 60 mg/kg of ACNU given intraperitoneally inhibited the growth of human glioblastoma in nude mice, but had no effect on survival time of nude mice. The antitumor effect of ACNU was significantly augmented by coadministration of 1 microgram/mouse rHuIL-1 beta. The elongation of the survival time of the tumor bearing nude mice was also observed in combined use of ACNU with rHuIL-1 beta. These results suggest that the combined use of IL-1 with chemotherapeutic agents seems to be desirable for clinical application in the treatment of patient with malignant gliomas from the viewpoints of the direct anti-tumor effect, the enhancement of the host immunity, and the prevention of myelosuppression caused by those agents.
...
PMID:[Application of interleukin 1 in the treatment of malignant gliomas with special reference to the experimental combination therapy with ACNU]. 235 Jan 91
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