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)

Recently, we reported enhanced tumor reduction using recombinant interferon-alpha A/D (IFN) combined with interleukin-2 (IL-2). Similar synergism affecting survival was assessed in treatment of both early and advanced pulmonary metastases. This combination was compared with the current "standard" IL-2 and lymphokine activated killer (LAK) therapy in the treatment of early and advanced pulmonary metastases. C57BL/6 mice injected via tail vein with the weakly immunogenic methylcholanthrene-induced murine fibrosarcoma MCA-106 were treated intraperitoneally with IL-2 (50,000 units b.i.d.), IFN (50,000 units q.d.), LAK (2.5-10 x 10(7)), or various combinations of above. Treatment of both early Day 3 and advanced Day 10 metastases using IL-2/IFN reduced metastases and prolonged survival over both controls and IL-2 alone. It was superior to IFN, LAK, and IFN/LAK. Addition of LAK to IL-2/IFN demonstrated no added benefit. Although no mortality was observed during treatment of Day 3 metastases, treatment of Day 10 advanced pulmonary metastases for 9 days with IL-2/IFN resulted in early deaths (33%) without visible tumor, indicating possible toxicity of treatment. These results show survival benefit of IL-2/IFN over IL-2, IFN, or LAK treatment in the therapy of early and advanced pulmonary metastases, albeit with added toxicity. Its relative simplicity and comparable efficacy to the more complex and costly IL-2/LAK provide important advantages for potential clinical applications.
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PMID:Enhanced survival of IFN-alpha augmented IL-2 therapy of pulmonary metastases: efficacy comparable to interleukin-2 and lymphokine activated killer cells. 198 29

It is known that interleukin-2 (IL-2) plays a fundamental role in the generation of immune cells capable of mediating tumor regression. Since IL-2 may be often reduced in patients with disseminated cancer, a pilot study was started to evaluate which relation exists between IL-2 levels and survival in metastatic solid neoplasms. The study included 25 patients with metastatic disease (breast cancer: 12; non-small-cell lung cancer: 13). Serum IL-2 levels were measured by radioimmunoassay on venous blood samples collected before the start of chemotherapy. Breast cancer was treated with weekly epirubicin and lung cancer with cisplatin plus etoposide. Low levels of IL-2 were seen in 10/25 patients. Irrespectively of response to therapy and of dominant metastasis sites, the mean survival time was significantly lower in patients with reduced IL-2 concentrations than in those with normal values. These results would suggest that the evidence of low IL-2 levels negatively influences the clinical course of patients with metastatic solid neoplasms.
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PMID:Lower survival in metastatic cancer patients with reduced interleukin-2 blood concentrations. Preliminary report. 199 35

Lymphocytes isolated from fresh human epithelial ovarian tumors can be expanded in the presence of recombinant interleukin-2, and some CD8 antigen-positive lymphocytes can lyse autologous fresh tumor cells. We treated 7 patients with advanced or recurrent epithelial ovarian cancers, using the adoptive transfer of these tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) following a single i.v. injection of cyclophosphamide. One case of disappearance (complete response) and 4 cases of greater than 50% decrease of tumor (partial response) were reported (14.3 and 57.1%, respectively). Regression of tumors in the ovary, liver, lung, and lymph node, both primaries and metastases, lasted for 3-5 months. Furthermore, 10 patients were treated alternately with a cisplatin-containing chemotherapeutic regimen and the adoptive transfer of TILs. Seven cases of complete regression and 2 cases of partial regression of cancer were reported. Four of the 7 patients with a complete response have had no recurrence for greater than 15 months of follow-up. It appears that this experimental technique of adoptive transfer of TILs achieves high response rates even without recombinant interleukin-2 administration and that the prospect of combined therapy using TILs and cisplatin offers hope for increasing the cure rate and long-term survival.
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PMID:Use of adoptive transfer of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes alone or in combination with cisplatin-containing chemotherapy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. 200 79

We investigated the effect of beta-cyclodextrin-benzaldehyde (CDBA) on lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell activity of spleen cells from normal or RCT(+)H-2(+)-sarcoma-bearing C3H/He mice. CDBA augmented the induction of LAK cytotoxicity in vitro against RCT(+)H-2+ tumor cells by IL-2, whereas the culture with CDBA alone did not. In a LAK cytotoxicity assay in vitro, the augmentative effect of CDBA was strongly exerted against spleen cells originating from 2-week-tumor-bearing mice, rather than those from normal mice or mice that had born tumors for 5 weeks. Such an augmentative effect was not observed against other tumor cells (YAC-1, D-6, Colon-26 and EL-4 cells) non-specifically. When the intravenous adoptive transfer of LAK cells was carried out in the mice, LAK cells from tumor-bearing mice induced by combined culture with interleukin-2 (IL-2) and CDBA markedly inhibited the pulmonary metastases of RCT(+)H-2+ tumor, while neither LAK cells from the same tumor-bearing mice induced by only IL-2 nor those from normal mice inhibited the pulmonary metastasis. The majority of LAK cells induced either by IL-2 plus CDBA or by IL-2 alone were found to be Thy1.2+ and asialoGM1+ cells by flow-cytometric analysis, but no obvious phenotypical difference was observed between them. However, the most significant effect of CDBA might be the maintenance of the Lyt-2+ cell level in the spleen cells from tumor-bearing mice. These results suggested that the costimulation of spleen cells with IL-2 and CDBA might induce cytotoxic T cells specific for syngeneic tumor cells.
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PMID:Augmentation of murine lymphokine-activated killer cell cytotoxicity by beta-cyclodextrin-benzaldehyde. 200 9

Immunotherapy with Interleukin-2 (IL-2) and LAK cells has shown antitumoral activity in metastatic cancer patients. So far, thrombocytopenia is the major side effect reported in hemostasis. We have studied coagulation parameters in 6 patients treated with r-Met Hu IL-2 [ala-125]. In each case, we have observed a significant fall in prothrombin time, fibrinogen, protein C, anti-thrombin III, plasminogen, alpha 2-antiplasmin and all of the clotting factors except factor VIII. There was a significant increase in the activated thromboplastin time. No significant modifications of the D-Dimer test, fibrin-fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) and thrombin time were observed. Our data suggest that r-Met Hu IL-2 [ala-125] could interfere with the hepatic synthesis of the clotting factors and their inhibitors.
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PMID:Blood coagulation abnormalities during adoptive immunotherapy with interleukin-2 (r-Met Hu IL-2 [ala 125]). 200 36

We administered 10 (E5) units per kg. interleukin-2, 3 times daily, with or without lymphokine-activated killer cells, to 10 patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. All patients had metastases to the lung, and 3 of 5 patients who had previously undergone nephrectomy had metastases to the renal fossa. Of the 9 patients who completed at least 1 course of therapy 3 had complete regression of disease outside the abdomen, including 2 who were rendered disease-free after subsequent cytoreductive surgery (nephrectomy in 1 and resection of the renal fossa recurrence in 1). Viable tumor comprised less than 1% of each surgical specimen. Our results support the view that initial treatment with interleukin-2 immunotherapy, followed by abdominal cytoreductive surgery if the peripheral metastases have regressed, may be preferable to the practice of performing abdominal cytoreductive surgery before administering interleukin-2 immunotherapy for patients with widely metastatic renal cell carcinoma.
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PMID:Interleukin-2 immunotherapy followed by resection of residual renal cell carcinoma. 201 5

The adoptive transfer of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in conjunction with interleukin-2 (IL-2) administration can mediate a reduction in established pulmonary and hepatic metastases of a variety of murine tumors as well as in patients with metastatic melanoma. To characterize further the fate of adoptively transferred TILs, the uptake of the thymidine analog 5-[125I]iodo-2-deoxyuridine ([125I]UdR) into the DNA of dividing cells was used to study the in vivo proliferation and migration patterns of transferred TILs in C57BL/6N mice. Animals received 500 rad of total body irradiation prior to cell transfer to separate incorporation of radiolabel into endogenous lymphoid cells from that into transferred TILs. Mice were subsequently treated with i.v. injections of TILs or no cells followed by i.p. injections of Hanks' balanced salt solution or IL-2. At various time points, mice received [125I]UdR, and 20 h later tissues were removed and counted on a gamma analyzer. A proliferation index (PI) was calculated by dividing the mean cpm of organs of experimentally treated mice by the mean cpm of organs of control mice. Animals receiving TILs alone demonstrated small increases in [125I]UdR in the lungs, liver, and spleen of saline-treated controls (PI = 1.4, 1.6, and 1.7, respectively, on day 4), while animals treated with 50,000 U of IL-2 alone showed greater increases in the lungs, liver, kidneys, and spleen (PI = 3.9, 6.1, 3.3, and 15.8). Mice receiving TILs plus IL-2 demonstrated the highest levels of radiolabel incorporation in the same organs (PI = 10.5, 19.4, 10.2, and 22.4). Over a period of 10 days, TIL plus IL-2 treated animals continued to incorporate significantly greater amounts of [125I]UdR for as long as high-dose IL-2 was administered. Animals treated with TILs demonstrated increased incorporation of radiolabel with increasing doses of IL-2. Injection of irradiated TILs did not result in an increased uptake of [125I]UdR into these tissues, thus confirming that TIL proliferation is responsible for the radiolabel uptake in animals receiving TILs alone or TILs plus IL-2. Additionally, fluorescein-labeled anti-Thy-1.1 antibody identified proliferating TILs derived from congenic B6.PL Thy 1a/CY (Thy-1.1) animals in the lungs, spleen, and liver of recipient C57BL/6N (Thy 1.2) mice. In summary, we have demonstrated that adoptively transferred TILs distribute widely after i.v. injection and can proliferate in various tissues especially under the influence of exogenous IL-2.
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PMID:In vivo proliferation of adoptively transferred tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in mice. 204 92

Melanoma metastases were harvested from 82 patients for the purpose of growing and expanding tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL). Tumor tissue cell suspensions were incubated with interleukin-2 (IL-2), followed by repeated exposure to tumor antigen with or without OKT3 monoclonal antibody (MoAb). Initial growth success was achieved in 56 of 82 cultures (72%). Efforts were made to expand 26 of these 56 cultures for therapeutic TIL; 23 of 26 early cultures (88%) were successfully expanded for in vivo therapy. It took a mean of 78.5 +/- 25.4 days to grow sufficient TIL for treatment. Therapy included cyclophosphamide (1 g/m2) on day 1, followed by a 96-hour continuous infusion of IL-2 (18 x 10(6) IU/m2/d) on days 2 to 5, and approximately 10(11) (mean 1.49 +/- 0.93 x 10(11)) TIL on day 2. Patients who responded received monthly IL-2 as a 96-hour infusion. Median patient age was 45 years of age. Sixty-seven percent of the patients were men. Performance status was 0 to 1 in 77% of patients. Thirty-four percent of the patients had liver metastases. The usual IL-2 toxicities were seen. Response rate for 21 patients was 24% (95% confidence interval, 10% to 49%). One complete response was achieved with cells 98% CD4+; four partial responses were achieved with cells 80%, 94%, 98%, and 98% CD8+, respectively. Four of eight patients who received TIL, which had never been stimulated with OKT3, had tumor response. The authors conclude that a treatment plan for IL-2/TIL is technically difficult, costly, and effective for only a minority of patients. Overall, clinical results are not clearly superior to those obtained with other IL-2 regimens.
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PMID:Continuous interleukin-2 and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes as treatment of advanced melanoma. A national biotherapy study group trial. 204 29

Interleukin-2 has been shown to mediate the regression of metastatic cancer. However, therapeutic application has been limited by the induction of dose-dependent toxicities in normal tissues secondary to a vascular leak syndrome. To better understand the pathophysiology of this vascular leak syndrome, the earliest microvascular effects of interleukin-2 were directly observed and quantitated by intravital microscopy. The cremaster muscle of anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats was prepared for in vivo microvascular observation. Animals were injected with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled albumin, and the interstitial emission intensity was used to assess macromolecular leakage. Both the intravenous injection and topical application of interleukin-2 to the cremaster muscle acutely induced the leakage of macromolecules from the microcirculation. The topical application of interleukin-2 induced macromolecular leakage without changes in central hemodynamic parameters. Furthermore, topically applied interleukin-2 did not produce changes in arteriolar or venular diameters, or in regional microvascular blood flow, which could have influenced the protein leakage. These data support the hypothesis that the acute increase in macromolecular leakage produced by interleukin-2 occurs secondary to an increase in endothelial porosity and not as a result of changes in hemodynamic or hydrostatic forces.
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PMID:Interleukin-2 acutely induces protein leakage from the microcirculation. 205 71

Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells were generated from splenocytes of rats bearing a weakly immunogenic Dunning prostate tumor (R-3227 AT-3) and activated with recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2). The maximal LAK activity was obtained from splenocytes of rats bearing tumors for 10 to 14 days after incubation with 1000 U/ml./day of rIL-2 for five to eight days. The majority of these LAK cells expressed high levels of asialo GM1 (89%), laminin (83%), OX-19 (80%) and OX-8 (88%) surface markers. LAK cells exhibited higher cytotoxicity to rat prostate tumor cells and mouse lymphoma in vitro than to other non-prostate tumor cells or normal rat splenocytes and thymocytes. Splenocytes of rats bearing prostate tumors have higher LAK activity than normal splenocytes. The Winn type assay showed that Dunning prostate tumor growth was inhibited effectively by LAK cells at a tumor cell:LAK cell ratio of 1:50. The therapeutic efficacy of LAK cells in the treatment of primary solid prostate tumors and pulmonary metastases of Dunning rats was evaluated. LAK cells in combination with rIL-2 showed a greater therapeutic benefit in 1) prevention of prostate tumor metastases to lung, 2) retardation of the primary tumor growth, 3) regression of spontaneously established pulmonary metastases, and 4) prolongation of survival as compared to untreated controls or those groups treated with LAK cells or rIL-2 alone. The results of this study indicate that the conjunctive therapeutic approach of using surgical therapy to remove primary solid tumors followed by adoptive immunotherapy with LAK cells plus in vivo administration of IL-2 may be potentially valuable in the treatment of prostate tumors, particularly for the spontaneous pulmonary metastases.
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PMID:Adoptive immunotherapy using lymphokine-activated killer cells and recombinant interleukin-2 in preventing and treating spontaneous pulmonary metastases of syngeneic Dunning rat prostate tumor. 205 87


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