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Query: UMLS:C0278883 (
metastatic melanoma
)
6,224
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The toxicity and therapeutic efficacy of the combination of recombinant
interferon gamma
(rIFN-gamma) and alpha (rIFN-alpha) was investigated in 15 patients with
metastatic melanoma
. Patients were treated with an escalating dose of rIFN-gamma and a fixed dose of rIFN-alpha administered s.c. 3 times a week. The maximum dose was well tolerated. The median survival time of the patients was 7 months; no clinical remissions were observed. In the majority of cases, expression of HLA class-I and -II antigens on the patients' peripheral blood lymphocytes and monocytes increased markedly during treatment. An increase in HLA-DR expression of peripheral blood T lymphocytes was correlated with a longer survival time. This suggests that activation of T lymphocytes may have a favourable influence on the course of metastatic disease. The in vitro anti-proliferative activity of IFNs on melanoma cell lines isolated from melanoma metastases during treatment of 3 patients was determined. In contrast to the lack of in vivo anti-tumour effect in patients, both rIFN-gamma and rIFN-alpha inhibited DNA synthesis of these melanoma cell lines in vitro, combined IFNs acting synergistically. Anti-proliferative activity observed in vitro occurred at IFN concentrations below the peak serum levels achieved in vivo.
...
PMID:In vivo effects of combination treatment with recombinant interferon-gamma and -alpha in metastatic melanoma. 249 52
Previous studies indicated that peripheral blood lymphocytes from patients (Pt-PBL) with lymph node metastatic melanomas proliferated in vitro and developed into tumor-restricted cytotoxic lymphocytes in response to alloantigens or interleukin 2 (IL-2). However, Pt-PBL were not stimulated by irradiated autologous
metastatic melanoma
(Auto-Me) cells. In the present study we report that the lack of stimulatory activity of Auto-Me cells may be due to a suppressive effect exerted by Auto-Me cells on the responder lymphocytes. In fact, we found that in 62% of cases examined, the addition of 5-10% Auto-Me cells to Pt-PBL cultures strongly inhibited both proliferation and the generation of tumor cytotoxic lymphocytes induced by alloantigens or IL-2. The inhibition was dose-dependent and tumor-restricted, and was not due either to toxicity, medium depletion or IL-2 absorption by Auto-Me cells. Normal fibroblasts, K562 cells and autologous E-lymphocytes were not suppressive. Auto-Me cells were able to inhibit Pt-PBL responses only when added during the first 24 h of culture and not later. Phenotypic analysis of Auto-Me cells using monoclonal antibodies directed against HLA-A,B,C, HLA-DR and melanoma-associated antigens revealed that the expression of high levels of DR antigens on Auto-Me cells was associated with an elevated suppressive activity. Conversely, Auto-Me cells with low or undetectable levels of DR antigens were not inhibitory. Furthermore, the increased expression of DR antigens on Auto-Me cells obtained by in vitro treatment with human
interferon gamma
(
IFN-gamma
) also resulted in an increased suppressive activity. We conclude that HLA-DR+
metastatic melanoma
cells can interfere with the generation of an anti-tumor immune response, thus potentially favoring the escape of the tumor from the host's control mechanism.
...
PMID:The inhibition of lymphocyte stimulation by autologous human metastatic melanoma cells correlates with the expression of HLA-DR antigens on the tumor cells. 633 55
We have reported that patients with
metastatic melanoma
treated with an autologous, dinitrophenol-modified vaccine develop inflammatory responses at tumor sites. Histologically, these inflamed lesions are characterized by T cell infiltration, which is sometimes associated with tumor cell destruction. We tested biopsy specimens of eight subcutaneous metastases that had developed inflammation following vaccine treatment for expression of mRNA for
interferon gamma
(IFN gamma), interleukin-4 (IL-4), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), and IL-10. Post-vaccine, inflamed biopsies contained mRNA for IFN gamma (5/8), IL-4 (4/8) or both (3/8), and for TNF alpha (4/7). In contrast, IFN gamma mRNA was detected in only 1/17 and TNF alpha mRNA in 2/16 control specimens (pre-treatment lymph node metastases or non-inflamed subcutaneous metastases). mRNA for IL-10, a cytokine with anti-inflammatory properties, was detected in 24/25 melanoma metastases and was independent of lymphoid content; in situ the reverse transcriptase/polymerase chain reaction confirmed that melanoma cells were the major source. These findings may provide a new parameter by which to measure the effects of cancer immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Expression of cytokine mRNA in human melanoma tissues. 755 83
The recommendations for the surgical management of clinically localized melanoma are now more clearly defined. Based on the results of two large randomized trials, optimal excision margins for primary tumors of varying thickness up to 4 mm have been determined: 1 cm for lesions smaller than 1 mm and 2 cm for lesions that are between 1 and 4 mm. In 90% of patients, the soft-tissue defect created by 2-cm excisions can be closed primarily, allowing surgery for early-stage melanoma to be performed predominantly on an outpatient basis. The role for an elective lymph node dissection in those patients with higher risk primary tumors is still under debate. "Selective lymphadenectomy" using lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy offers a rational approach to clinically negative regional lymph node basins. The promising early results with lymphatic mapping are exciting, but need to be confirmed in a multi-institutional trial. Renewed interest has developed in hyperthermic limb perfusion for the treatment of transit and locally advanced recurrent disease because of the availability of melphalan and the recent reports of higher response rates with the addition of tumor necrosis factor and
interferon gamma
to melphalan. In the management of metastatic disease, recent large series have demonstrated that surgery can offer excellent palliation and, in some selected clinical settings, prolong survival. In those patients with surgically inaccessible lesions, radiation therapy can provide valuable palliation. The value of hyperthermia in addition to radiation therapy in the treatment of
metastatic melanoma
is still under investigation.
...
PMID:Surgery and other local-regional modalities for all stages of melanoma. 801 97
We have developed a novel approach to cancer immunotherapy-an autologous whole-cell vaccine modified with the hapten dinitrophenyl (DNP). This approach elicits significant inflammatory responses in metastatic sites and some objective tumor responses. Post-surgical adjuvant immunotherapy with DNP-modified melanoma vaccine in a setting of micrometastatic disease produces significant survival prolongation in stage III melanoma patients. Histologically, the inflammatory responses of the tumor consist of infiltration by lymphocytes, the majority of which are CD8+, HLA-DR+ T cells. T cells from these lesions tend to have mRNA for
interferon gamma
. T cell receptor analysis suggests that the tumor-infiltrating T cells are clonally expanded. DNP-modified vaccine also induces T cells in the peripheral blood, which respond to DNP-modified autologous cells in a hapten-specific, MHC-restricted manner. Moreover, a T cell line generated from these lymphocytes responded to only a single HPLC fraction of MHC-associated, DNP-modified tumor peptides. Since inflammatory responses in metastases were not consistently associated with dramatic tumor regression, we considered the possibility of immunosuppression at the tumor site. We found that mRNA for the anti-inflammatory cytokine, interleukin-10 (IL-10) is expressed in most
metastatic melanoma
tissues and subsequently demonstrated that IL-10 protein is produced by melanoma cells. Thus the efficacy of DNP vaccine could be further enhanced by inhibition of IL-10 production or binding. Finally, we expect these results obtained with melanoma to be applicable to other human cancers.
...
PMID:Active specific immunotherapy with hapten-modified autologous melanoma cell vaccine. 900 71
We have established a sensitive ELISPOT assay measuring
interferon gamma
(IFN gamma) release on a single-cell basis to detect influenza peptide-specific CD8+ T cells in uncultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Using this method, we studied the T cell response to HLA-A1 and HLA-A2.1 binding peptide epitopes derived from the MAGE-1 and MAGE-3 proteins, from the melanoma-associated antigens tyrosinase, Melan-A/MART-1 and gp100, and from influenza proteins in stage IV melanoma patients and healthy controls. In 18 of 24 HLA-A2-positive donors (75%), but only in 9 of 25 HLA-A2-positive melanoma patients (36%) T cells reactive with the influenza matrix peptide were demonstrated (p = 0.007). T cells responding to one or several of the melanoma-associated peptides were detected in 5 of 25 HLA-A2-positive patients with
metastatic melanoma
. Four of these 5 patients had been treated with interleukin-2- and IFN alpha-containing therapy. Two of the 24 healthy donors had T cells reactive with the MART-1 27-35 peptide. No reactivity with the HLA-A1-binding peptides from MAGE-1 or MAGE-3 was detected in any of the HLA-A1-positive healthy controls or melanoma patients. These results show that the IFN gamma-ELISPOT assay is suitable to determine quantitatively T cells reactive with melanoma-associated and influenza peptide epitopes in uncultured PBMC. The failure to detect T cells responding to influenza in many melanoma patients with progressive disease may indicate an impairment of their T cell function.
...
PMID:Analysis of the T cell response to tumor and viral peptide antigens by an IFNgamma-ELISPOT assay. 918 91
IFN-gamma is a potent immunomodulator, which has activity against melanoma in vitro and in murine models. However, preclinical data suggests that the optimal therapeutic and immunomodulatory dose may not be the maximally tolerated clinical dose. We conducted a Phase II/III trial in good prognosis patients with
metastatic melanoma
to determine whether a therapeutic and immunomodulatory dose-response curve of IFN-gamma could be identified, and whether the two could be correlated. Ninety-eight patients with
metastatic melanoma
were randomized to one of seven dose levels of IFN-gamma ranging from 0.01 to 0.90 mg/m2. All patients were required to have s.c., skin, soft tissue, or nodal disease, although visceral disease was also allowed, and no more than one prior chemotherapy regimen. Patients received IFN-gamma as a 1-h i.v. infusion three times per week for at least 8 weeks or until progressive disease. Ninety-five patients were eligible for toxicity evaluation; 81 were eligible for tumor response. Four patients responded to therapy (response rate, 5%) at three dose levels: two patients at 0.01 mg/m2 and one each at 0.5 and 0.9 mg/m2. The duration of response ranged from 5 to 58 weeks. Toxicities were typical of IFNs and included flu-like constitutional symptoms. No dose-response relationship was identified for efficacy. A dose-response relationship for toxicity was observed only for fever and chills (p = 0.035) and hepatic toxicity (p = 0.034). IFN-gamma has minimal activity in
metastatic melanoma
, and a therapeutic dose-response curve could not be identified. Although potent dose-dependent effects on immunomodulation were identified (J. M. Kirkwood, J. Bryant, J. H. Schiller, M. M. Oken, E. C. Borden, and T. L. Whiteside. Immunomodulatory function of
interferon gamma
in patients with
metastatic melanoma
: results of a phase IIB trial in subjects with
metastatic melanoma
: ECOG Study E4987, submitted for publication), this biological activity does not translate into therapeutic activity in the metastatic disease setting in this trial.
...
PMID:Eastern cooperative group trial of interferon gamma in metastatic melanoma: an innovative study design. 981 86
Cancer vaccines aim at inducing (a) tumor-specific effector T cells able to reduce/eliminate the tumor mass, and (b) long-lasting tumor-specific memory T cells able to control tumor relapse. We have shown earlier, in 18 human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A*0201 patients with
metastatic melanoma
, that vaccination with peptide-loaded CD34-dendritic cells (DCs) leads to expansion of melanoma-specific
interferon gamma
-producing CD8+ T cells in the blood. Here, we show in 9 out of 12 analyzed patients the expansion of cytolytic CD8+ T cell precursors specific for melanoma differentiation antigens. These precursors yield, upon single restimulation with melanoma peptide-pulsed DCs, cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) able to kill melanoma cells. Melanoma-specific CTLs can be grown in vitro and can be detected in three assays: (a) melanoma tetramer binding, (b) killing of melanoma peptide-pulsed T2 cells, and (c) killing of HLA-A*0201 melanoma cells. The cytolytic activity of expanded CTLs correlates with the frequency of melanoma tetramer binding CD8+ T cells. Thus, CD34-DC vaccines can expand melanoma-specific CTL precursors that can kill melanoma antigen-expressing targets. These results justify the design of larger follow-up studies to assess the immunological and clinical response to peptide-pulsed CD34-DC vaccines.
...
PMID:Expansion of melanoma-specific cytolytic CD8+ T cell precursors in patients with metastatic melanoma vaccinated with CD34+ progenitor-derived dendritic cells. 1517 7
The aim of this study was to evaluate the tolerability and activity of intratumoral administered human interleukin 12 encoded by a vector derived from the canarypox virus (ALVAC-IL-12). Nine patients with surgically incurable
metastatic melanoma
who had subcutaneous nodules available for injection were enrolled. ALVAC-IL-12 was administered by intratumoral injection on days 1, 4, 8, and 11. Tumor nodules greater than 2 cm in diameter were injected with 2 x 10(6) median tissue culture infectious doses (TCID(50)), and smaller tumors were injected with 1 x 10(6) TCID(50). The total dose per patient per time point ranged from 1 x 10(6) to 4 x 10(6) TCID(50). Toxicity was mild to moderate and consisted of inflammatory reactions at the injection site and fever associated with chills, myalgia, and fatigue. No dose-limiting toxicities occurred. Increases in IL-12 mRNA, and also increases in
interferon gamma
mRNA, were observed in ALVAC-IL-12-injected tumors compared with saline-injected control tumors in four of the nine patients. ALVAC-IL-12-injected tumors were also characterized by T cell infiltration. Three patients demonstrated increases in serum IL-12 and in
interferon gamma
levels. All patients developed neutralizing IgG antibody to the canarypox vector. One patient manifested a complete response of injected subcutaneous metastases and uninjected in-transit metastases. The intratumoral injection of ALVAC-IL-12 at these dose levels and according to this schedule was well tolerated and resulted in measurable biologic response in patients with
metastatic melanoma
.
...
PMID:Intratumoral administration of a recombinant canarypox virus expressing interleukin 12 in patients with metastatic melanoma. 1570 92
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) may elicit contrasting effects on tumor growth, depending on their biological activities. Macrophages use arginine either to synthesize nitric oxide (NO) through the inducible NO synthase (iNOS) or to produce ornithine through arginase activity. Although the effects of NO are primarily cytotoxic, production of ornithine may promote tumor cell proliferation. Thus, iNOS/arginase balance in TAMs may be crucial in tumor progression. The aim of this study was (a) to explore iNOS and arginase expression in TAMs associated with human melanoma at different stages of tumor progression and (b) to explore whether melanoma cells influence iNOS and/or arginase expression in TAMs under basal condition and in the presence of
interferon gamma
and/or lipopolysaccharide. Immunohistochemical analyses performed on tissue sections from in situ melanoma, invasive melanoma of different pT categories, and
metastatic melanoma
revealed that (a) the percentage of iNOS-positive TAMs was significantly higher in in situ and thin melanomas in comparison with more advanced, thicker tumors; (b) the percentage of arginase-positive TAMs did not change among the pT categories analyzed; and (c) the percentage of iNOS-positive TAMs was greater than that of arginase-positive TAMs in peritumoral and intratumoral locations of thin melanomas (pT1). Moreover, by the use of an in vitro experimental protocol represented by B16 murine melanoma cells cocultivated with inflammatory macrophages, we found that melanoma cells stimulate iNOS expression and NO production in macrophages. In conclusion, our in vivo and in vitro results suggest that, mainly in early melanoma lesions, iNOS prevails over arginase in TAMs, a phenomenon possibly stimulated by contact with tumor cells. However, macrophages stimulated by murine melanoma cells secreted a level of NO compatible with an antitumor activity only in the presence of
interferon gamma
.
...
PMID:Arginine metabolism in tumor-associated macrophages in cutaneous malignant melanoma: evidence from human and experimental tumors. 1764 Jul 16
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