Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The therapeutic efficacy of active immunization with B16-F10.9 melanoma cells transfected with syngeneic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class-I genes, modified by infection with Newcastle Disease virus (NDV) or modified by both treatments, was compared. B16-F10.9 tumor-bearing mice were treated at various stages of tumor growth and metastasis with irradiated, modified tumor-cell vaccines. Irradiated tumor cells and H-2Db transfectants did not stimulate anti-tumor immunity while H-2Kb transfectants and NDV-modified F10.9 cells showing low and high expression of MHC class-I genes efficiently prevented metastasis of small established tumors. NDV-modified parental-cell vaccines functioned optimally and improved overall survival by about 60%, also at early stages of metastasis establishment. A synergistic effect of H-2Kb expression and virus modification on rejection of micrometastases was observed in mice bearing advanced tumors. Postoperative vaccination of mice carrying multiple metastases with NDV-modified vaccines caused significant, but incomplete, reduction of metastatic tumor load. The therapeutic effect of NDV-modified tumor vaccines was dependent on multiple immune mechanisms. Depletion of CD8, CD4 or NK cells by in vivo treatment with monoclonal antibodies reversed the immunotherapeutic effects of the vaccine. Thus, tumor xenogenization and gene modification may act synergistically to vaccinate against advanced tumors, while single modalities can effectively vaccinate against metastasis at early stages of tumor growth.
...
PMID:Effective anti-metastatic melanoma vaccination with tumor cells transfected with MHC genes and/or infected with Newcastle disease virus (NDV). 798 21

Swainsonine, an alpha-mannosidase inhibitor which blocks Golgi oligosaccharide processing, represents a new class of compounds that inhibit both rate of tumor growth, and metastasis, in murine experimental tumor models. In this first phase I study, the quantitative and qualitative toxicities of swainsonine have been studied in patients given a continuous i.v. infusion over 5 days, repeated at 28-day intervals. Dose levels were escalated in increments of 100 micrograms/kg/day from 50-550 micrograms/kg/day. Nineteen patients with both solid tumor and hematological malignancies were given a total of 31 courses. Hepatotoxicity, particularly in patients with liver metastases, was the dose-limiting toxicity. The maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and the recommended starting dose (MTD -1 level) were 550 and 450 micrograms/kg/day, respectively. Common side effects included edema, mild liver dysfunction, a rise in serum amylase, and decreased serum retinol. Acute respiratory distress syndrome possibly precipitated by swainsonine resulted in a treatment-related death in a patient with significant pretreatment hepatic dysfunction. One patient with head and neck cancer showed > 50% shrinkage of tumor mass for 6 weeks after treatment. Two patients with lymphangitis carcinomatosis on chest X-ray noted improvement in cough and shortness of breath during the infusion of swainsonine and for 1 week thereafter. Clearance and serum half-life for swainsonine were determined to be approximately 2 ml/h/kg, and 0.5 day, respectively. Golgi oligosaccharide processing, a putative anticancer target for swainsonine was inhibited in peripheral blood lymphocytes as evidenced by a marked decrease in leukoagglutinin binding after 5 days of treatment. Oligomannosides in patient urine increased 5-to 10-fold over the 5 days of treatment, indicating that tissue lysosomal alpha-mannosidases were also blocked by swainsonine. Urine oligomannoside accumulation reached steady state at 3 days, approximately 1 day after serum drug levels reached steady state. The fraction of HLA-DR-positive cells in peripheral blood lymphocytes increased following 5 days of swainsonine treatment, an effect similar to that observed for peripheral blood lymphocytes from normal subjects cultured with swainsonine. No significant changes in CD3, CD4, CD8, CD16, and CD25 were observed. Swainsonine produces minimal toxicity when administered i.v. to cancer patients at dosages that inhibit both Golgi alpha-mannosidase II and lysosomal alpha-mannosidases. Detection of hepatic metastases or liver enzyme abnormalities prior to treatment predict for more significant toxicity.
...
PMID:A phase I study of swainsonine in patients with advanced malignancies. 813 47

Twenty renal cell carcinomas were cultured in the presence of 200 IU/ml of recombinant interleukin-2; tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) developed in 70% of cases; the phenotypic profile was heterogeneous in 11 TIL tested on day 30: 4 were mostly CD8 positive, 4 mostly CD4 and 3 showed CD4-CD8-CD56 mixed phenotypes. The cytotoxic activity was also heterogeneous, and no TIL developed a tumour-specific cytotoxic activity. The phenotypic profile and cytotoxic activity were also tested after thawing, and this study demonstrated that TIL can be frozen at the time of the nephrectomy, then thawed and cultured for the purposes of therapeutic trials when metastases appear. The differences between TIL derived from renal cell carcinoma and TI1 derived from melanoma are discussed.
...
PMID:Phenotypic and functional analysis of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes from patients with renal cell carcinoma. 813 57

The growth of a poorly immunogenic methylcholanthrene (MCA)-induced murine (m) sarcoma genetically engineered to secrete human (h) TNF-alpha (MCA-102-hTNF) was studied. MCA-102-hTNF tumor cells were implanted in animals bearing three- or 7-day pulmonary metastases established with the parental line MCA-102-WT (wild type). This model approximates the clinical situation in which patients with metastatic cancer would be vaccinated with autologous tumor genetically modified to stimulate the host immune response. Reduction in the number of pulmonary metastases was occasionally seen but was not consistently reproducible. Other cytokine-producing tumors had either no effect on distant pulmonary metastases (mIL-4, IFN-gamma) or a mild, inconclusive effect similar to hTNF-alpha (mTNF-alpha). Significant growth inhibition of MCA-102-hTNF was noted in animals bearing pulmonary metastases. This inhibition was: 1) tumor specific (regression occurred only in animals bearing pulmonary metastases from the same parental line), 2) TNF specific (it was inhibited by in vivo administration of anti hTNF mAbs), 3) dependent on cellular immunity (immune-depletion with anti-CD4 or CD8 mAbs permitted growth). Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) could not be grown from MCA-102-WT or MCA-102-hTNF tumors nor from MCA-102-WT subcutaneous implants in mice bearing MCA-102-WT pulmonary metastases. However, TIL could be grown from hTNF-secreting tumors implanted in mice bearing MCA-102-WT metastases. These TIL were therapeutic against established lung metastases from the parental tumor in adoptive immunotherapy models. These studies suggest a strategy for using gene modified tumors for the therapy of established cancer.
...
PMID:Treatment of established lung metastases with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes derived from a poorly immunogenic tumor engineered to secrete human TNF-alpha. 814 31

Repeated injections of mitomycin C-treated T2 fibrosarcoma cells into tumor-sensitized mice cause regression of a secondary tumor graft and more than 90% of the mice are cured. In the data presented here, an enhancement of the cytolytic cell-mediated activities measured in vitro against the specific T2 targets is shown in lymph nodes draining the tumor and in the spleen during the process of tumor rejection. Histopathologic studies revealed a rapid and marked accumulation of mononuclear cells mostly at the periphery of the rejected tumor tissue. A significant increase of CD8-positive, asialo GM1-positive and acid phosphatase-positive cells was observed in the rejected tumors whereas CD4-positive cells were similarly detected in both progressing and rejected tumor tissue. As macrophages seemed to be the population presenting the most persistent variation after immunization, the production of TNF-alpha was studied within the tumor site and in the lymphoid tissues during the regression process. Firstly, the presence of TNF-alpha within the cytoplasm of most of the adherent cell fractions isolated from the spleen and the tumor of immune mice was demonstrated by immunocytochemistry. Next, TNF-alpha mRNA-containing cells were determined by in situ hybridization of frozen tumor sections and identified essentially as tumor infiltrating macrophages. Finally, the macrophage populations isolated from tumors and from the spleen of immune mice were able to produce in vitro large quantities of TNF-alpha without exogenous stimulation. These findings support the role of TNF-alpha in the effector mechanisms contributing to the tumor regression process.
...
PMID:Phenotypical and functional analyses of mononuclear cells during rejection of a transplanted murine fibrosarcoma. 814 54

In order to search for a new therapy that would maximize the effect of interleukin-2 (IL-2) in evoking antitumor immunity in vivo, the therapeutic effect of a combination of mitomycin-C(MMC)-treated tumor cells and recombinant IL-2 was examined for its induction of antitumor activity against established melanoma metastasis. In C57BL/6 mice intravenously (i.v.) injected with B16 melanoma cells on day 0, the combined treatment with an intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of MMC-treated melanoma cells on day 6 and 2500 U rIL-2 (twice daily) on days 7 and 8 markedly reduced the number of pulmonary metastases. This antitumor activity was more effective than that in untreated controls and mice that were injected with MMC-treated melanoma cells alone or rIL-2 alone. When the i.p. injection of MMC-treated tumor cells was replaced by other syngeneic tumor cells, antitumor activity against metastatic melanoma was not induced. The antitumor activity induced by this treatment increased in parallel with an increase in the dose of rIL-2 injected. In contrast, an i.p. injection of soluble tumor-specific antigens alone could induce only a marginal level of antitumor activity, and this activity was not augmented by subsequent i.p. injections of rIL-2. In vivo treatment with anti-CD8 monoclonal antibody (mAb), but not with anti-CD4 mAb or anti-asialo-GM1 antibody, abrogated the antitumor activity induced by this combined therapy. This suggests that the antitumor effect was dependent on CD8+ T cells. Lung-infiltrating lymphocytes from mice that had been i.v. injected with melanoma cells 11 days before and were treated with this combined therapy, showed melanoma-specific cytolytic activity. This combined therapy also showed significant antitumor activity against subcutaneously inoculated melanoma cells. These results demonstrate that the combined therapy of an i.p. injection of MMC-treated tumor cells and subsequent and consecutive i.p. administration of rIL-2 increases antitumor activity against established metastatic melanoma by generating tumor-specific CD8+ CTL in vivo.
...
PMID:Generation of tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in vivo by combined treatment with inactivated tumor cells and recombinant interleukin-2. 816 15

We have previously shown that an intact immune system was essential to the increase in survival time of IFN-alpha/beta-treated mice injected i.v. with an IFN-alpha/beta-resistant line of Friend erythroleukemia cells (FLC) highly metastatic to the liver and spleen. Here, we have investigated the early interactions of IFN alpha/beta with host cells prior to the development of the immune response. IFN alpha/beta treatment resulted in 50- to 100-fold inhibition of FLC multiplication in the liver and spleen of normal DBA/2 mice shortly after tumor inoculation, as evaluated by colony formation in agarose. IFN treatment was far less effective in inhibiting the multiplication of FLC in the livers of NK-cell-deficient DBA/2 beige mice, or in immunocompetent DBA/2 mice treated with antibody to asialo GMI, or silica, or in mice subjected to sub-lethal irradiation. Injection of antibody to CD4 or CD8 did not affect the early inhibitory action of IFN alpha/beta on FLC multiplication but did decrease survival time. Light- and electron-microscope examination of the livers of IFN-treated, FLC-injected mice confirmed the early inhibition of FLC multiplication in the liver and spleen. Our results indicate that IFN alpha/beta inhibits the development of FLC visceral metastases by acting first on host cells, such as NK cells and macrophages, and then continues to act in consort with the developing immune response.
...
PMID:Interaction of IFN alpha/beta with host cells essential to the early inhibition of Friend erythroleukemia visceral metastases in mice. 818 64

These studies investigate the effects of exogenously administered recombinant human IL-7 (rhIL-7) on mouse leukocyte subsets in vivo in normal and tumor-bearing mice. The administration of rhIL-7 to normal mice caused a pronounced leukocytosis (three- to fivefold increase over background) in the spleen and lymph nodes, with B-lineage and T cells, NK cells, and macrophages all being increased. CD8+ T cells increased disproportionately, such that the CD4 to CD8 ratio decreased dramatically. The rhIL-7-induced effects were dose-dependent, increased with duration of treatment, and were reversible after cessation of rhIL-7 administration. T cell number increases after rhIL-7 treatment were primarily a result of an expansion of the peripheral T cell population. Importantly, splenocytes from rhIL-7-treated mice have enhanced proliferative responses to various T cell stimuli in vitro and were able to potentiate an allogeneic CTL response in vivo. The rhIL-7-induced changes in T cell number and the CD4 to CD8 ratio also were observed in mice bearing early Renca renal adenocarcinoma pulmonary metastases, and these changes coincided with up to a 75% reduction in pulmonary metastases. Overall, these results demonstrate that the administration of rhIL-7 to mice profoundly increases the number of B and T cells, and reduces the number of pulmonary metastases. The results also suggest that IL-7 may be useful for restoring lymphoid subsets in immunosuppressed hosts and in enhancing T cell-mediated immune responses. Such effects may be useful in the treatment of microbial diseases and cancer.
...
PMID:Administration of recombinant human IL-7 to mice alters the composition of B-lineage cells and T cell subsets, enhances T cell function, and induces regression of established metastases. 820 7

We have previously found that an increased tumorigenicity and spontaneous metastatic potential of BW5147-derived T lymphoma cells was associated with a decrease in major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I H-2Kk antigen expression. This suggested that H-2Kk antigens may control the tumorigenic potential of BW T lymphoma cells. Our current experiments aimed to prove this association by specifically altering H-2Kk expression by gene transfection. Transfected cells expressing a high level of H-2Kk antigens were significantly less tumorigenic and metastatic after subcutaneous inoculation. However, there was selection in vivo for cells expressing a reduced level of H-2Kk antigens, which concomitantly led to an increased tumorigenicity. These data further confirmed the strong association between H-2Kk expression and tumorigenicity. We subsequently tested whether the immune system is implicated in this phenomenon by inoculating the H-2Kk transfectants into irradiated, immunocompromised recipients. Our results indicate that the reduced tumorigenicity of the BW H-2Kk transfectants is due to an immune rejection mechanism, mediated by CD8+ immune effector cells, as revealed by in vivo depletion experiments with anti-CD8 antibodies. Hence, we hereby demonstrated that H-2Kk antigens increased the immunogenicity of BW cells, via a CD8-dependent mechanism, which consequently reduced their tumorigenicity.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1994 Jan
PMID:Tumorigenicity of mouse T lymphoma cells is controlled by the level of major histocompatibility complex class I H-2Kk antigens. 828 23

A total of 139 patients with disseminated malignant melanoma were enrolled in an uncontrolled Phase II trial evaluating the activity of Melacine, allogeneic vaccine incorporating Detox, immunologic adjuvant. Nineteen patients, including 18 with progressive disease, dropped out of the study prior to receiving one full vaccination course of five injections over 6 weeks. Disease presentation among study participants included skin or lymph nodes (34%), pulmonary (24%), visceral (34%), and no evidence of disease (NED) (7%). One documented metastatic site was seen in 41%, two sites in 24%, and three or more sites in 27% of the patients studied. Objective clinical response rates for evaluable patients were CR 3%, PR 5%, minor response 4%, stable 23%, and progressive disease 65%. Median survival from time of diagnosis for patients treated with Melacine is presently estimated at 23 months (45/139 patients censored). Median date from diagnosis of metastatic disease to study entry was 3 months. Side effects were generally mild to moderate with pain at injection site (37%), granulomas (13%), erythema (6%), and flu-like symptoms (14-29%) predominating. Precursor antimelanoma cytotoxic T cell (pre-CTL) titers, in comparison with prestudy evaluations, clearly increased in 42% of the patients evaluated. Significantly extended survival characteristics were observed among patients who displayed an expansion of a population of CD57, CD8 co-positive lymphocytes during therapy in comparison with those patients not displaying this peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) population expansion (34 mo vs. 12 mo, respectively, p = 0.04) and among those patients displaying disease stabilization or better as a clinical response (p = 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Interim results of a phase II multicenter clinical trial evaluating the activity of a therapeutic allogeneic melanoma vaccine (theraccine) in the treatment of disseminated malignant melanoma. 851 15


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>