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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Observations during the last several years on the relationships between bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DC) and the cells which are in direct contact with them led to the idea that DC may have regulatory properties. Such regulatory properties exerted by DC were noted in experimental cancers in murine systems as well as in human cancers. It was noted that patients with the same type of cancer in which DC are present in the tumor survive longer than patients without DC in the tumor. It is not known how DC can abrogate the development of the metastatic tumor cells in the primary tumor, nor how the tumor cells are capable of abrogating the anticancer activity of the DC and allowing the development of tumor
metastases
. Studies on the anticancer activity of macrophages revealed that these cells have an inducible Nitric Oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) which utilizes arginine to produce NO. Suppressor macrophages release NO, which inhibits the ribonucleotide reductase and mitochondrial oxidation in tumor cells in vitro. It was also reported (4) that Interferon gamma (IFN-gamma), produced by murine T helper 1 cells, induces NOS activity in macrophages, while T helper 2 cells which produce Interleukin-4 (IL-4) inhibit the expression of NOS in macrophages. The hypothesis presented in this paper suggests that DC have a gene for NOS which is inducible by immunomodulators (e.g.
IFN
gamma, OK432, LPS) and can be suppressed by cytokines produced by tumor cells (e.g. IL-4, IL-10).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Success and failure of dendritic cell (DC) anticancer activity may be modulated by nitric oxide synthetase (NOS) gene expression: a hypothesis. 768 49
Cryosections of 28 primary and metastatic midgut carcinoid tumors from 12 patients with carcinoid syndrome were investigated immunohistochemically with antibodies that recognize human MHC class I (HLA-ABC) and class II (HLA-DR) antigens. The tumor parenchyma of all six patients treated with interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) during a mean 8.6 months (3 x 10(6) to 5 x 10(6) U three times weekly) exhibited unequivocal HLA-ABC immunoreactivity, with only minor discrepancies between primary lesions and
metastases
in mesenteric lymph nodes and liver. Class I staining was absent on the tumor cells of all 14 specimens from the patients without
IFN
therapy but was induced by culturing freshly dispersed tumor cells in vitro for 48 hours in the presence of recombinant
IFN
-alpha. The stroma of all neoplasms displayed class I and II immunostaining, as did usually a few CD4-expressing cells. The carcinoid specimens lacked parenchymal HLA-DR immunoreactivity, which is interesting considering suggestions on improved prognosis for bowel carcinomas lacking the class II expression. The study supports the idea that induction of MHC class I antigens could contribute to the beneficial clinical effect of
IFN
-alpha treatment in patients with midgut carcinoid tumors.
...
PMID:MHC class I and II antigen expression and interferon alpha treatment of human midgut carcinoid tumors. 772 32
In the treatment of renal cell carcinoma both complete (CRs) and partial remissions (PRs) have been obtained using recombinant (r) interferon alpha (IFN-alpha), with response rates ranging from 0 to 31% (mean 16%). rIFN-gamma is a potent immunostimulating agent, but the clinical experience of its use is limited and results are conflicting. In a phase II study with the combination of rIFN-alpha 2c (Boehringer Ingelheim) and rIFN-gamma (Genentech, supplied by Boehringer Ingelheim) in 31 eligible patients, a response rate of 25% was recorded. Based on this observation a randomised phase III study was initiated to investigate the possible advantage of the addition rIFN-gamma to rIFN-alpha 2c treatment. Treatment consisted of rIFN-alpha 2c 30 micrograms m-2 = 10 x 10(6) IU m-2 s.c. twice weekly in arm A and the same dose of rIFN-alpha combined with rIFN-gamma 100 micrograms m-2 = 2 x 10(6) IU m-2 in arm B. Eligibility criteria included documented progression of disease; patients with bone lesions only and overt central nervous system
metastases
were excluded. Between November 1988 and September 1990, 102 patients were entered into the study. An interim analysis showed a response in 7/53 (13%) patients (two CRs and five PRs) in the rIFN-alpha 2c monotherapy arm and in 2/45 (4%) (one CR and one PR) patients in the combination arm. This difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.17). The probability of missing an eventual 10% advantage for the combination is 0.001. The numbers are insufficient to rule out a negative effect of the addition of rIFN-gamma. The dose intensity of
IFN
-alpha 2c for the two treatment arms was the same. The addition of rIFN-gamma does not improve the response rate of rIFN-alpha 2c monotherapy. A possible detrimental effect cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:EORTC (30885) randomised phase III study with recombinant interferon alpha and recombinant interferon alpha and gamma in patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma. The EORTC Genitourinary Group. 784 Oct 54
Neuroendocrine gut and pancreatic tumors are neoplasms that present distinct features from other malignant tumors. Firstly, in most patients, tumor growth is rather slow, and even in advanced
metastatic disease
, there is very little impairment of the general well-being of the individual, e.g. appetite and weight. Secondly, these tumors are known to produce specific peptide hormones which may be factors in some clinical conditions e.g. carcinoid, Zollinger-Ellison and hypoglycemic syndromes. These conditions can be critical to the patients and can occasionally be lethal. Therefore, the treatment of neuroendocrine tumors must control the clinical symptoms related to hormone over-production and prevent further tumor growth. These two features are not always in parallel. Systemic treatment of neuroendocrine tumors mainly consists of chemotherapy, interferon and somatostatin analog administration. Chemotherapy has been used for at least 30 years; the most effective combination has proved to be streptozotocin with 5-fluorouracil or adriamycin. This combination produces biochemical responses in up to 60% of patients with endocrine pancreatic tumors; the results in carcinoid patients are very poor and response rates are < or = 10%. Alpha-interferon (
IFN
-alpha) produces biochemical responses in approximately 50% of patients with malignant carcinoid tumors, significant reductions in tumor size in 15% and a further 39% of patients have disease stabilization with no further tumor growth. Somatostatin analogs have only been used clinically within the last 10 years, but produce symptomatic improvement in 70% of cases, biochemical responses in 40-60%, but rarely produce any significant reduction in tumor size. These analogs are particularly useful to control severe clinical symptoms and are the first-line therapy for the management of carcinoid patients both peri- and intra-operatively. Patients with endocrine pancreatic tumors, particularly those with glucagon and vasointestinal peptide-producing tumors, benefit most from this type of treatment. Recently, a combination of
IFN
-alpha and a somatostatin analog has showed an additive effect of these two drugs. The side effects of streptozotocin and 5-fluorouracil are mainly nausea and vomiting which can be controlled with 5-HT3 receptor blocker therapy. Another significant adverse reaction is impaired renal function. The adverse reactions to
IFN
-alpha are mainly flu-like symptoms, fatigue, mild impairment of liver and bone marrow function and autoimmune reactions in 15% cases. Somatostatin analog treatment causes a low frequency of adverse reactions, those which do occur include gall stone formation and steatorrhea. Future systemic treatment should be based on increased knowledge of the tumor biology, particularly growth-regulatory mechanisms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Endocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract: systemic treatment. 785 82
Two groups of patients with disseminated breast carcinomas who had failed radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and hormonotherapy were treated with natural interferon alpha (nIFN-alpha) alone or in combination with nIFN-gamma delivered in cycles of 10-12 intralesional (i.l.) injections to recurrent and metastatic lesions. In group, I, 16 skin lesions in 12 patients received nIFN-alpha alone resulting in 7 complete regressions verified histologically (CR), 7 partial regressions (PR), and no regressions (NR) in 2. Group II included 4 patients in whom 7 cutaneous recurrences were treated with nIFN-alpha/nIFN-gamma (5 CR, 2 PR), 2 were injected with nIFN-alpha alone (1 CR, 1 PR), and 1 received nIFN-gamma alone (PR). Two additional patients in group II were given i.l. injections of nIFN-alpha/nIFN-gamma to lymph node
metastases
(1 CR, 1 PR). Clinical toxicity was experienced by 5 of 12 patients in group I and by all the patients in group II and was controlled in most instances by antipyretics. Systemic antitumor effects were not appreciable clinically. Nevertheless, noninjected lesions exposed only to systemic levels of IFNs, when studied immunohistochemically, displayed an immunological response similar to that of
IFN
-injected lesions, although less intense. Therefore, IFNs can be useful in controlling locoregional recurrences of breast cancer even in patients who are not responding to other forms of therapy. Furthermore, in addition to the local antitumor actions, they appear to be capable of eliciting systemic immunological effects.
...
PMID:Regression of skin recurrences of breast carcinomas treated with intralesional injections of natural interferons alpha and gamma. 787 70
Therapeutic effect of a vaccinia colon oncolysate prepared with interleukin-2 (IL-2) gene-encoded vaccinia virus (IL-2VCO) in combination with recombinant interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) was studied in a syngeneic murine CC-36 colon hepatic metastasis model. Treatment with this IL-2VCO+IFN-alpha produced a higher survival rate (90% on day 60 after tumor transplantation) in mice having CC-36 hepatic
metastases
when compared to treatment with
IFN
-alpha (0%), VCO+IFN-alpha (0%), or IL-2VCO (11%). The only treatment that produced a survival rate similar to the survival rate of IL-2VCO+IFN-alpha was VCO+IL-2 +
IFN
-alpha (survival rate was 67%). The cause of the prolonged survival with the IL-2VCO+IFN-alpha treatment was identified as the reduction of CC-36 hepatic
metastases
(mean liver weight 1.31 g and mean tumor nodules 2). This reduction was significant when compared to IL-2VCO (1.58 g and 11), VCO+IFN-alpha (1.96 g and 53), and
IFN
-alpha (2.24 g and 91) treatments. The mechanism of the induction of antitumor response by the VCO+IL-2+IFN-alpha treatment was analyzed by measuring the direct cytotoxic activity of
IFN
-alpha on CC-36 tumor cells and by measuring the induction of cytolytic T-cell activity against CC-36 tumor cells. Results suggest that
IFN
-alpha produced minimal direct cytotoxic activity against CC-36 cells; however, the IL-2VCO+IFN-alpha combination therapy induced an enhanced cytolytic T-cell activity against CC-36 tumor cells (85.1% at E:T 100:1) when compared to other treatments (IL-2VCO 26.3%, VCO+IFN-alpha 13.4%, and IFN-alpha alone 6.3%). In addition, the role of T-cell subsets for the induction of antitumor immune response was analyzed in a survival study that used CD8-positive T cell-depleted mice. It was found that the survival rate was affected in mice depleted with CD8-positive T cells and treated with IL-2VCO+IFN-alpha when compared to control mice which had no T-cell depletion and were treated with IL-2VCO+IFN-alpha. This study suggests that the addition of
IFN
-alpha along with IL-2VCO increased the survival rate of mice having CC-36 hepatic
metastases
through the induction of CD8-positive T cells. Furthermore, this study confirms that IL-2VV can be used as a substitute for recombinant IL-2 in cytokine-augmented active specific immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Immunotherapy of a vaccinia colon oncolysate prepared with interleukin-2 gene-encoded vaccinia virus and interferon-alpha increases the survival of mice bearing syngeneic colon adenocarcinoma. 788 37
The efficacy and immunomodulatory effects of low-dose gamma-interferon (gamma
IFN
) were investigated in an unselected population of patients with metastasising renal cell carcinoma. 36 patients suffering from metastasising renal cell carcinoma with a performance status exceeding Karnofsky index of 50 were entered into the open phase I/II trial. The majority of the patients recruited displayed a large tumour burden, and 28 patients (78%) had
metastases
involving two to six organ sites. Treatment was started with a 2-week cycle of either daily or weekly subcutaneous administration of either 100, 200 or 400 micrograms gamma
IFN
. After a therapy-free interval of 2 weeks treatment was switched to the alternate mode of administration. Subsequently, treatment was continued with the same dose applied once a week for a minimum of 3 months. Serum levels of neopterin and beta-2-microglobulin, as well as flow cytometric analyses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells, were used for the assessment of biological response. Minimal antitumour activity was observed in this high-risk patient group and only 1 patient experienced a partial response (PR) lasting 36 + months. Comparison of the patients' characteristics to those of other low-dose gamma
IFN
trials revealed a highly significant difference in the tumour burden and clinical response. We conclude that patient selection is a decisive parameter for the outcome of treatment with low-dose gamma
IFN
, and that patients with poor prognostic features and a large tumour burden are not likely to respond to this almost atoxic treatment.
...
PMID:Low-dose gamma-interferon therapy is ineffective in renal cell carcinoma patients with large tumour burden. 794 88
Previously we described the use of solid-phase anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (mAb) to stimulate murine tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) and their subsequent expansion in recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2). In a pulmonary
metastases
model using the methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma MCA-105 anti-CD3 activated TIL were capable of eradicating disease similar to TIL cultured in rIL-2 only. Here we extend these observations by characterizing the biological effects of sequential solid-phase anti-CD3 activation. TIL from MCA-105 tumour activated with solid-phase anti-CD3 on day 1 were reactivated on day 14, or day 26, or both and compared to TIL grown in rIL-2 only or TIL activated with anti-CD3 once on day 1. Reactivation enhanced in vitro proliferation 1.8- to 4-fold compared to TIL activated once with anti-CD3 (P < 0.05). In addition, the total lytic capacity of the cultures was enhanced after reactivation without changing the phenotype of the TIL cultures. Reactivation resulted in a greater in vivo efficacy when the TIL were administered within 72 h of reactivation. In contrast, TIL activated with anti-CD3 on day 1 and day 14 were least effective of all TIL cultures (P < 0.05). This correlated with in vitro cytokine production. The most effective TIL cultures in vivo produced 4- to 100-fold higher amounts of cytokines, especially interferon gamma (
IFN
gamma) and granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF), than the other cultures. On the other hand, the least effective in vivo TIL culture, TIL activated with anti-CD3 on day 1 and 14, produced little or no cytokines. These data suggest that in vitro production of cytokines is indicative of in vivo efficacy of anti-CD3 activated TIL.
...
PMID:Reactivation of murine tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes with solid-phase anti-CD3 antibody: in vitro cytokine production is associated with in vivo efficacy. 795 95
The incidence and clinical significance of therapy-induced neutralizing interferon beta (
IFN
beta) antibodies was studied in a group of 21 melanoma patients treated with natural
IFN
beta and 7 patients treated with recombinant
IFN
beta. They were treated subcutaneously with 3 x 10(6) IU three times per week in an adjuvant open trial for 24 weeks after surgical removal of all detectable
metastases
. Of the 21 patients treated with natural
IFN
beta, 95% developed significant levels of neutralizing antibodies after 24 weeks. In comparison, 28% of the 7 patients treated with recombinant
IFN
beta developed neutralizing
IFN
beta antibodies. Cross-reactivity of the antibodies could be demonstrated. Persistence of antibody titers was seen in 80% of the patients 24 weeks after cessation of treatment with natural
IFN
beta. No correlation between the maximum antibody titers and the antibody persistence after cessation of therapy could be established. We detected a clear correlation between the formation of neutralizing antibodies and the decrease in beta 2-microglobulin and 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase and therefore the drop in biological activity. In this adjuvant trial there was no difference in relapse rate and time until relapse between antibody-positive and antibody-negative patients. No difference in clinical outcome could be established between the patients treated with natural
IFN
beta and recombinant
IFN
beta.
...
PMID:Neutralizing interferon beta antibodies in melanoma patients treated with recombinant and natural interferon beta. 795 28
Cells from a spontaneous, invasive, and metastasizing mouse mammary adenocarcinoma (TS/A-pc) were transfected with a retroviral vector containing the mouse
IFN
-alpha 1 gene. TS/A clones secreting varying amounts of
IFN
-alpha 1 were isolated and their tumorigenicity was evaluated after s.c. or i.v. injection into immunocompetent BALB/c mice. Almost all of the
IFN
-alpha-secreting TS/A clones failed to grow in a high percentage of mice or formed small tumors after a long latency time, whereas TS/A-pc or transfection control cells always grew into large s.c. tumors. Rejection was mainly mediated by CD8+ T lymphocytes and partially by polymorphonuclear cells, as demonstrated by selective immunosuppression experiments and histologic and ultrastructural data. After rejection, a significant portion of mice displayed an immune resistance to the subsequent challenge with TS/A-pc. When the metastatic ability of
IFN
-alpha-secreting clones was compared with that of previously characterized IFN-gamma-secreting TS/A clones, it was found that the expression of
IFN
-alpha into TS/A tumor cells resulted in a potent inhibition of
metastases
formation, whereas IFN-gamma expression either did not affect or even enhanced the metastatic behavior of TS/A cells. These results provide strong evidence for the usefulness of
IFN
-alpha-producing tumor cells for the development of gene therapy strategies and vaccines against metastatic tumors.
...
PMID:IFN-alpha 1 gene expression into a metastatic murine adenocarcinoma (TS/A) results in CD8+ T cell-mediated tumor rejection and development of antitumor immunity. Comparative studies with IFN-gamma-producing TS/A cells. 796 33
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