Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024312 (lymphopenia)
4,859 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Major surgery impairs the cellular immune response. We have therefore studied the immunological effects of low-dose recombinant interleukin 2 given to patients undergoing surgery for colorectal cancer to determine whether this agent has potential in perioperative adjuvant immunotherapy. Patients were randomly allocated to control (n = 13) or treatment groups (n = 12). Immunological studies of both lymphocyte function and subset number were performed preoperatively and on Days 1, 4, 7, and 10. Treatment with recombinant interleukin 2 prevented the postoperative fall in both natural killer and lymphokine-activated killer cell cytotoxicity, clearly demonstrated in the control group. The treatment group also showed in vivo T-cell activation with an initial lymphopenia followed by a rebound lymphocytosis and upregulation of the subset markers CD25 (interleukin 2 receptor) and CD45RO (T-memory cells). These combined effects may have important consequences in controlling metastatic dissemination of tumor during the vulnerable perioperative period.
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PMID:Perioperative immunotherapy with recombinant interleukin 2 in patients undergoing surgery for colorectal cancer. 139

This report describes an immunological study made on a 58 years old patient with a Whipple disease diagnosed in 1969 and treated with different antibiotics. All attempts to stop the antibiotherapy resulted in reappearance of clinical symptoms. Further, this patient suffered anguillulosis infection in 1954 and this persists despite thiabendazole therapy, as shown by periodical creeping lunear dermatitis (larva currens). Laboratory investigations displayed low IgM levels and lack of cutaneous reactivity to conventional antigenic challenge. In vitro studies on granulocyte and monocyte phagocytic activity did not display any clearcut deficiency. Finally, this patient displayed peripheral lymphopenia and decrease of the T4+ (CD4) lymphocyte subpopulation. The proliferative response of lymphocytes to phytohemagglutinin stimulation (a cellular T-cell function) was drastically decreased in assays performed during the 16 month duration of patient's exploration. This proliferative defect seems to be due to increased PGE2 release (a 3-5 fold increase was demonstrated), resulting in inhibition of interleukin 2 (IL2) synthesis and activity. Further, patient's lymphocyte normally expressed IL2 receptor. When the B lymphocyte dependent humoral response was assayed, normal B lymphocyte differentiation into plasmocytes was found. However the pokeweed mitogen induced proliferative response of B lymphocyte displayed major decrease in four sequential tests. This might be due to a lack of B cell growth factor (BCGF) activity, since this interleukin involved in T lymphocyte, B lymphocyte cooperation was not found in supernatants of patient's cell. Further, interleukin 1 (involved in macrophage lymphocyte cooperation) was normally produced. In conclusion, no deficiency of in vitro phagocytose was demonstrated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Immunological profile of Whipple's disease evolving over a period of 17 years]. 245 91

Recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2) administration, a new form of therapy for patients with far-advanced cancer, is associated with a "third space" syndrome, i.e., pulmonary edema, respiratory distress, and hypoxemia, which limits the dose and duration of treatment. To extend our knowledge regarding this toxicity, we established a sheep chronic lung lymph fistula model and measured hemodynamics, arterial blood gases, caudal mediastinal (lung) lymph flow (QL), and blood and lung lymph cellular changes before, during, and after (recovery) a 3-day continuous rIL-2 infusion (9 x 10(5) U/kg). Moderate systemic hypotension, mild pulmonary hypertension, and an increase in alveolar-arterial PO2 gradient was present on day 3 of rIL-2 infusion. QL increased from a base line of 1.9 +/- 0.2 to a maximum of 4.3 +/- 1.1 ml/15 min on day 3 of rIL-2 infusion. At no time was there a change in lymph-to-plasma protein ratio. The leukocyte count increased significantly to 16.1 +/- 4.5 x 10(3) cells/mm3 at recovery day 1. The percentage of blood lymphocytes decreased significantly by day 1 of rIL-2 infusion, returned to base-line levels on day 3, and significantly increased on day 2 of recovery. Lung lymph lymphocytes decreased significantly on days 1 and 2 of rIL-2 infusion. There was a shift in their size; i.e., their area increased from 32 +/- 7 to 57 +/- 19 micron 2 (P less than 0.05) by day 2 of rIL-2 infusion. By day 1 of recovery, lung lymph lymphocyte counts increased significantly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cardiorespiratory and cellular changes with interleukin 2 infusion in sheep. 278 28

Cats exposed to the feline leukemia virus (FeLV) may mount an effective immune response and eliminate the virus, develop a non-viremic, latent infection or become persistently infected and shed the virus. Persistently infected cats commonly die of secondary opportunistic infections that result from FeLV-induced immunosuppression. The acquired immunosuppression is the most frequent and most devastating consequence of FeLV infection in the cat. Immunosuppression is targeted primarily to the cell-mediated immune system and has been attributed to the viral p15e envelope protein. The decreased IgG response and proliferative response to T cell mitogens is thought to be due to a defect in the helper cell function. As a result of T helper cell immunosuppression, infected cats may also have defective cytotoxic lymphocyte and activated macrophage functions which are regulated by their lymphokines. Research has shown that the virus causes a general suppression in the production of T cell-derived lymphokines, including gamma interferon and interleukin 2. A decrease in the function of polymorphonuclear leukocytes has also been reported and may contribute to deaths due to opportunistic infections in FeLV-positive cats. There are numerous parallels between the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in man and the FeLV-induced immunodeficiency syndrome in cats. Frequent deaths due to opportunistic infections, lymphopenia, depressed cell-mediated immune responses to T cell-dependent antigens despite hypergammaglobulinemia and the presence of a long period of time between infection and the onset of clinical signs are just a few of the syndromes that are similar between the 2 retroviral diseases. A new strain of FeLV, FeLV-FAIDS has been associated with a naturally occurring immunosuppressive syndrome that is strikingly similar to AIDS in man. In addition, a T-lymphotropic retrovirus has recently been identified from cats with an immunodeficiency-like syndrome; this feline lentivirus disease is morphologically similar, but antigenically distinct from the human immunodeficiency virus, the cause of AIDS. Treatment for FeLV immunosuppression is primarily supportive. The development of a soluble tumor cell antigen vaccine has been shown to be efficacious in preventing FeLV infections.
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PMID:Clinical and immunologic aspects of FeLV-induced immunosuppression. 284 93

Production of interferon (IFN)-gamma by peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL) was examined in cultures of unseparated fresh whole blood exposed to phytohemagglutinin (PHA), concanavalin A (Con A), or pokeweed mitogen (PWM). The yield of IFN-gamma was measured by a newly developed immunoradiometric assay. Nine of 14 patients with acute pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) showed a depressed IFN-gamma response to Con A and/or PWM. Only four of these TB patients also showed a depressed IFN-gamma response to PHA. Stimulation of the patients' PBL cultures with PHA in the presence of exogenous interleukin 2 (IL 2) produced normal IFN-gamma yields in all but the most severely depressed patients. PBL cultures of TB patients with defective IFN-gamma production in response to mitogenic lectins also produced less IFN-gamma after stimulation with tuberculin PPD. Although some patients showed a moderate degree of lymphopenia, their OKT4/T8 lymphocyte ratios were mostly normal or close to normal, with the notable exception of one TB patient who has been diagnosed to have the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS).
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PMID:Defective gamma-interferon production in peripheral blood leukocytes of patients with acute tuberculosis. 308 65

We report four cases of Omenn's syndrome (OS), an autosomal recessive disease characterized by early erythrodermia, protracted diarrhea, severe infections, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, and leukocytosis with marked eosinophilia. The immunological investigations revealed B lymphopenia with increased levels of serum IgE and marked depression of T-cell activation, not restored by the addition of exogenous interleukin 2 (IL-2). IL-2 and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production in vitro were very low or absent. One patient was treated with HLA-identical bone marrow transplant with a complete remission of the clinical picture and the immunological defect. The infant died of graft versus host disease 4 months after the graft. For the remaining three infants the outcome was also fatal within the first year of life. In conclusion, OS should be considered a severe combined immunodeficiency disease with peculiar clinical, immunological, and histological findings.
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PMID:Clinical and immunological findings in four infants with Omenn's syndrome: a form of severe combined immunodeficiency with phenotypically normal T cells, elevated IgE, and eosinophilia. 311 64

Adoptive immunotherapy with interleukin 2 (IL-2) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells (IL-2/LAK) is a technically demanding cancer therapy dependent upon large scale isolation and culture of lymphocytes. An important question is whether this technology can be accomplished routinely outside of highly specialized centers. In addition, no systematic examination of laboratory correlates of IL-2/LAK therapy in humans has been reported to date. The objectives of this report are to address two issues relevant to IL-2/LAK therapy. (a) Can IL-2/LAK therapy be accomplished outside of previously identified centers of expertise? (b) What are the relevant laboratory/clinical parameter correlations? The six institutions in the National Cancer Institute extramural trial treated 83 evaluable patients with renal cancer, malignant melanoma, or colon cancer with IL-2/LAK by a uniform protocol. Patients received 5 days of IL-2 priming, then daily leukaphereses for 5 days starting 48 h after IL-2 to harvest cells. Mononuclear cells were isolated, then cultured in roller bottles in 1-liter aliquots for 3 to 4 days at a cell density of 1.5 x 10(6) per ml with recombinant IL-2, 1500 units per ml. Cells were harvested and administered to patients with additional IL-2. Administration of IL-2 regularly induced lymphopenia and rebound lymphocytosis. Leukapheresis yields and numbers of LAK cells generated in culture and reinfused into patients correlated directly with peak lymphocyte counts achieved by IL-2 administration. Mean mononuclear cell recovery per 5 days of leukapheresis (+/- SEM) was 14.3 +/- 0.8 x 10(10). Average volume of cells cultured per patient was 95 liters (range, 41 to 235). Mean yield of cells harvested from cultures was 53%. Mean total number of LAK cells infused per patient was 7.6 +/- 0.4 x 10(10) (range, 2 to 15.2 x 10(10]. LAK activity was measured in vitro by lysis of 51Cr-labeled natural killer-resistant Daudi and fresh tumor targets. LAK effector cells regularly lysed these targets in vitro. Neither tumor reduction nor clinical toxicity correlated with dose or with cytolytic activity of LAK cells, or with other laboratory parameters including base-line lymphocyte count and IL-2-induced lymphocytosis. We conclude: (a) large quantities of LAK effector cells with tumoricidal activity can be generated routinely at different centers; (b) neither in vitro LAK activity nor numbers of LAK cells infused were predictive of clinical efficacy or toxicity. There is a need to identify other laboratory or clinical parameters more predictive of IL-2/LAK therapeutic efficacy or toxicity.
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PMID:Laboratory correlates of adoptive immunotherapy with recombinant interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cells in humans. 326 May 37

Twenty-two patients with refractory malignancies were treated with four escalating weekly doses of recombinant interleukin 2 (IL2), given either i.v. by 2- or 24-h infusion, or s.c. A 1-wk washout period between each dose of IL2 was provided for the evaluation for pharmacokinetic and immunomodulatory effects. The maximum i.v. dose was 30 X 10(6) units; the dose-limiting toxicities were fever, flu-like symptoms, and hypotension. The maximum s.c. dose was 3 X 10(6) because of volume limitations with s.c. injection. No tumor regression was seen. During infusions of 3 X 10(6) units over 2 h or 24 h, serum IL2 levels greater than or equal to 223 units/ml or 16 units/ml were maintained, respectively; with s.c. injection of 3 X 10(6) units, levels greater than 20 units/ml were maintained for 9 h. Marked lymphopenia was observed 24 h after the initiation of IL2 doses which was completely reversible when measured prior to the next dose. The lymphopenia was nonselective; T- and B-lymphocytes decreased in an IL2 dose-dependent manner, without consistent change in the OKT4:OKT8 ratio. No change was detected in monocyte expression of HLA-Dr or T-cell expression of the IL2 receptor. The in vitro generation of lymphokine-activated killer cytotoxicity decreased sharply and transiently shortly after i.v. doses. Mitogen responsiveness, delayed-type hypersensitivity, natural killer cytotoxicity, and mixed-lymphocyte reactivity were unchanged or decreased transiently shortly after IL2 doses. These studies help define the bioavailability of IL2 by i.v. or s.c. routes, and they will aid in the design of studies utilizing daily doses of IL2.
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PMID:Recombinant interleukin 2 toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and immunomodulatory effects in a phase I trial. 349 57

The influence in vivo of immunosuppressive drugs (cyclosporine, azathioprine, and corticosteroids) on the production of various lymphokines (alpha and gamma interferon, interleukin 2), both in organ transplant recipients and in normal volunteers taking 100 mg hydrocortisone orally has been studied. To avoid interference with the rejection process or viral infection, patients were studied in a steady state with low maintenance immunosuppression consisting of prednisolone combined with azathioprine or with cyclosporine. In patients treated with both drug regimens, significant depression of production of the three lymphokines was found. Normal volunteers challenged with 100 mg hydrocortisone showed inhibition of production of interleukin 2 and alpha and gamma interferon in 4 hr, a time corresponding to the nadir of T cell lymphopenia, affecting the OKT4 subset preferentially. The percentage of OKT8 cells remained unchanged. Percentages of large granular lymphocytes increased, but their absolute number was not significantly modified. Changes in lymphocyte markers were fully reversible after 24 hr, but interleukin 2 production remained markedly depressed, showing that the redistribution patterns induced by corticosteroids on lymphocyte subsets may be dissociated from functional consequences.
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PMID:Influence of in vivo immunosuppressive drugs on production of lymphokines. 391 67

Lymphocytes which appeared in the peripheral blood early (approximately 4 weeks) after complete bone marrow aplasia were studied in two groups of patients. Twenty-two allogeneic bone marrow transplant recipients and 12 acute nonlymphocytic leukemia patients (entering remission) were compared to 70 healthy control subjects studied during the same time interval. Studies performed included phenotyping T-cells using monoclonal antibodies and T-cell colony formation in response to phytohemagglutinin. The phenotypic profile for the two patient groups differed from each other and from that of the healthy controls. The total number of circulating cells reactive with OKT4 were significantly depressed in marrow graft recipients while only mildly, but significantly, depressed in leukemic patients. The number of circulating cells reactive with OKT8 were depressed in leukemic patients but were essentially normal in marrow graft recipients. The number of circulating cells reactive with OKla1 and OKT10 were significantly elevated in marrow graft recipients while significantly depressed in leukemic patients. The T4:T8 ratio was significantly depressed for marrow transplant recipients and significantly elevated for leukemic patients. T-cell colony formation in agarose without and with added interleukin-2 was decreased for both groups, more so for marrow graft recipients who virtually lacked the ability to make colonies without exogenous interleukin 2. These phenotypic and functional data suggest that T-cell reconstitution after bone marrow aplasia and profound lymphopenia takes quite different pathways for leukemic patients recovering from remission induction therapy and for recipients of bone marrow transplants. We were unable to correlate T-cell functional response in T-cell colony formation with the phenotypic profile of peripheral blood T-cells.
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PMID:T-cell phenotypic profile and colony formation during recovery from cytotoxic therapy-induced marrow aplasia. 393 27


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