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Query: UMLS:C0278883 (
metastatic melanoma
)
6,224
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adherent lymphokine-activated killer (A-LAK) cells, selected from peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) of normal human donors by adherence to plastic, and cultured in the presence of interleukin 2 (IL-2), are highly enriched in CD3-CD56+ natural killer (NK) cells. These IL-2-activated NK cells proliferate extensively upon further culture in conditioned medium containing IL-2. In contrast, we previously found that with PBL of some patients with advanced cancer, the same procedure often failed to yield high enrichment of NK cells or substantial expansion in the numbers of these effector cells. To obtain sufficient numbers of A-LAK cells for adoptive immunotherapy in cancer patients, an improved method for generation of human A-LAK cells with irradiated mitogen-stimulated allogeneic PBL- or
Epstein
-Barr virus-transformed lymphoblastoid cell lines was introduced. In paired experiments, A-LAK cultures with feeder cells showed significantly enhanced IL-2-driven proliferation of A-LAK cells obtained from normal donors or patients with
metastatic melanoma
, renal cell carcinoma, and other types of solid cancers. The growth-promoting effect of feeders for A-LAK cells resulted in significantly improved expansion of CD3-CD56+ (NK) effector cells in A-LAK cultures established from normal donors. Cells in these cultures also had significantly higher levels of antitumor cytotoxicity against K562 and Daudi targets than did A-LAK cells grown in the absence of feeder cells. Enrichment in CD3-CD56+ cells and antitumor activity also occurred in patient A-LAK cultures supplemented with mitogen-stimulated feeder cells, but was not statistically significant. Overall, despite improved proliferation and CD3-CD56+ cell content of A-LAK cultures established in the presence of mitogen-activated feeder cells, only 39% (21/54) of patients tested generated A-LAK cells that would be judged acceptable for large-scale therapeutic use by criteria based on fold expansion and purity of A-LAK cells. These results suggest that in comparison to normal individuals, NK cells of many patients with advanced solid tumors are defective in their ability to respond by proliferation to IL-2 even in the presence of exogenously supplied growth factors.
...
PMID:Depressed ability of patients with melanoma or renal cell carcinoma to generate adherent lymphokine-activated killer cells. 179 Jan 41
In vitro culture of
metastatic melanoma
fragments with 150 units of recombinant interleukin 2 resulted in the successive expansion of CD4+ and then CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) throughout a 2-month period. TIL cultured for 43 days and consisting of 95% CD8+ and 10% CD4+ T lymphocytes were cloned by limiting dilution (LD). Thirteen CD8+ and thirty-one CD4+ clones were obtained, indicating that the frequency of clonogenic CD8+ proliferative T lymphocytes was much lower than that of their CD4+ homologues. When LD was performed in the presence of autologous melanoma cells the frequency of CD8+ clones was increased by factor 4. The DNA from TIL of day 43 bulk culture and of six CD8+ clones was hybridized with T cell receptor (TcR) beta and gamma probes. Identical configuration of the nonfunctional gamma and functional beta TcR genes was found in "bulk culture" and cloned TIL. The CD8+ clones therefore derived from a clonal population of CD8+ cells which had expanded in vitro before the LD. All the CD8+ clones tested were strongly cytotoxic for autologous melanoma cells but did not kill autologous fibroblasts or concanavalin A blasts, or any of the 10 allogeneic tumor targets tested, including 5 melanomas, 2 breast cell lines, 1 neuroblastoma, K-562 and the
Epstein
-Barr virus-transformed cell line used as a feeder. Furthermore, specific killing was inhibited by monoclonal antibodies against CD3, CD8, TcR alpha/beta and against class I major histocompatibility complex antigens indicating that these cytotoxic T lymphocyte clones recognized autologous tumor cells through the TcR, in an HLA class I-restricted manner. These data show that it is feasible to obtain tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes from melanoma TIL with a simple culture technique and that a single clone could be expanded to more than 10(10) cells which should allow testing of immunotherapeutic potential of these cells by adoptive transfer into melanoma patients.
...
PMID:Selective expansion of a specific anti-tumor CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte clone in the bulk culture of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes from a melanoma patient: cytotoxic activity and T cell receptor gene rearrangements. 197 94
The serum antibody response to human melanoma has prognostic and potential physiological consequences. The specificity of the host B cell antibody response may be an important determinant of disease outcome. We have utilized
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) transformation to analyze the repertory of the host B cell response to melanoma. Production of antibody that binds selectively to autologous (eight cases) or allogeneic (four cases) short-term-cultured melanoma cells was assessed from EBV-transformed B lymphoblastoid cells. Forty-two cultures of EBV-transformed B cells that secreted IgM and 23 that secreted IgG antibodies gave patterns of differential reactivity with autologous or allogeneic melanoma. Antibody-forming B cells persisted in producing melanoma-reactive IgG and IgM for 8-21 weeks. Preselection of B cells by adsorption to tumor cell antigens before transformation enhanced the frequency of antibody secretion. The specificity of the antibody produced by the longest-producing culture appears to be restricted to a subset of melanomas. The patient from whom this tumor-restricted IgG-producing B cell was retrieved was unusual, having had a transient serum IgG of similar specificity, and having manifest a syndrome of vitiligo at the time of her development of serum antimelanoma antibody, followed by disease-free survival of resected recurrent
metastatic melanoma
to the present (more than 6 years). This study has given support to findings of conventional serology, revealing the production of melanoma-reactive antibody from B cells of patients who have demonstrable serological response to tumor.
...
PMID:Human IgG and IgM monoclonal antibodies against autologous melanoma produced by Epstein-Barr-virus-transformed B lymphocytes. 217 72
The expression of Ia-antigen on four different
Epstein
-Barr virus associated nasopharyngeal carcinomas xenografted into athymic mice could be detected by the monoclonal antibody OKIa. Xenografts of four additional head and neck tumors other than nasopharyngeal carcinoma and one xenograft of a
metastatic melanoma
cell line were negative for the Ia-antigen. Control antibodies OKT3, OKT4, OKT9, OKM1 and Leu7 were negative with all nasopharyngeal carcinomas and the non-nasopharyngeal carcinoma xenografts. Complement receptors as the presumed receptors for the
Epstein
-Barr virus could not be detected on xenografted nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells but were found on freshly prepared peripheral blood lymphocytes as well as on the
Epstein
-Barr virus transformed lymphoblastoid cell line QIMR-WIL. The possible role of the Ia-antigen on nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells in respect to the
Epstein
-Barr virus association of this malignancy is discussed.
...
PMID:The expression of Ia-antigen on nasopharyngeal carcinomas xenografted into nude mice. 299 11
In this study we used human monoclonal antibody (Hu-mAb) L72 as an intratumoral injection of cutaneous metastasis of melanoma to study its anti-tumor effects in human patients. Hu-mAb L72 was developed by transforming peripheral blood lymphocytes from a melanoma patient in vitro with the
Epstein
-Barr virus, forming a human lymphoblastoid cell line that produces 2-5 micrograms of IgM per ml. This IgM Hu-mAb was shown to react specifically with ganglioside GD2 and have a strong cytotoxic effect on human melanoma cells in the presence of complement. Patients with cutaneous
metastatic melanoma
were given intralesional injections on a daily or weekly injection schedule. Regression was seen in all tumors except in those of two patients whose tumors were shown to have low antigenicity. Histopathological data showed tumor degeneration, fibrosis, free melanin, and some degree of lymphocyte or macrophage infiltration. One patient with melanoma satellitosis treated with Hu-mAb showed complete regression with no sign of recurrence 20 months after the initial treatment. With the exception of mild erythema, no side effects were observed in any patient.
...
PMID:Regression of cutaneous metastatic melanoma by intralesional injection with human monoclonal antibody to ganglioside GD2. 346 77
Tumor-reactive CD4+ T cells can be isolated and expanded from the peripheral blood and tumor lesions of patients with melanoma. In contrast to CD8+ T cells, little is known about the antigens recognized by these CD4+ T cells. As a consequence, little is known about the diversity of the T-cell receptor (TcR) use by melanoma-reactive CD4+ T cells. To address these questions, a panel of clonal or highly oligoclonal CD4+ T-cell lines was established from a patient with
metastatic melanoma
. A CD4+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) line was established that was highly oligoclonal and recognized only autologous melanoma cells but not allogeneic melanomas, suggesting the expression of a mutated or uniquely expressed antigen by this melanoma. The antigen recognized by the CD4+ TILs could be presented by intact melanoma cells or by autologous
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) B cells pulsed with melanoma cell lysates. A panel of CD4+ clonal and highly oligoclonal T-cell lines was isolated form peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from this patient; these were also reactive with autologous melanoma cells or tumor extracts pulsed on autologous EBV B cells. Despite their reactivity with the autologous melanoma, we found no evidence of restricted TcR V gene use, because all six T-cell lines recognized antigen via different TcR alpha/beta rearrangements. Furthermore, there were no conserved amino acids in the CDR3 regions of these TcRs, indicating that multiple TcR clonotypes could mediate recognition of a single unique major histocompatibility (MHC) complex class II restricted melanoma antigen or that multiple MHC class II restricted melanoma antigens are expressed by the melanoma.
...
PMID:T cell-receptor V gene use by CD4+ melanoma-reactive clonal and oligoclonal T-cell lines. 978 97
The involvement of HLA-class I in target cell lysis by CD4(+) cytolytic T cells (CTL) has been a controversial issue. A CTL clone of CD4 phenotype was derived from the peripheral blood lymphocytes of a patient with primary melanoma. The CTL clone stably lysed the autologous primary melanoma cells for approximately 9 months in culture. Both the Valpha2/Vbeta8 T-cell receptor and CD4 were involved in CTL cytotoxicity. Of a large panel of allogeneic primary and
metastatic melanoma
or colorectal carcinoma cells, autologous and allogeneic
Epstein
-Barr virus-transformed B cells and autologous fibroblasts, only allogeneic
metastatic melanoma
cells matched with the autologous tumor cells for HLA-class I (B57[17]) were lysed and induced IFN-gamma secretion by the CTL clone. Lysis of the autologous tumor cells was significantly blocked by monoclonal antibody to HLA-B17. Importantly, allogeneic, HLA-class I- and class II-unmatched melanoma cells were lysed by the CTL only following transfection of the cells with B57[17] cDNA. Our results provide direct evidence for the involvement of both CD4 and HLA-class I in tumor cell lysis by CD4(+) CTL.
...
PMID:CD4(+), HLA class I-restricted, cytolytic T-lymphocyte clone against primary malignant melanoma cells. 1062 86
We identified 18 patients with the distinct clinical phenotype of susceptibility to disseminated nontuberculous mycobacterial infections, viral infections, especially with human papillomaviruses, and fungal infections, primarily histoplasmosis, and molds. This syndrome typically had its onset in adulthood (age range, 7-60 years; mean, 31.1 years; median, 32 years) and was characterized by profound circulating monocytopenia (mean, 13.3 cells/microL; median, 14.5 cells/microL), B lymphocytopenia (mean, 9.4 cells/microL; median, 4 cells/microL), and NK lymphocytopenia (mean, 16 cells/microL; median, 5.5 cells/microL). T lymphocytes were variably affected. Despite these peripheral cytopenias, all patients had macrophages and plasma cells at sites of inflammation and normal immunoglobulin levels. Ten of these patients developed 1 or more of the following malignancies: 9 myelodysplasia/leukemia, 1 vulvar carcinoma and
metastatic melanoma
, 1 cervical carcinoma, 1 Bowen disease of the vulva, and 1 multiple
Epstein
-Barr virus(+) leiomyosarcoma. Five patients developed pulmonary alveolar proteinosis without mutations in the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor or anti-granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor autoantibodies. Among these 18 patients, 5 families had 2 generations affected, suggesting autosomal dominant transmission as well as sporadic cases. This novel clinical syndrome links susceptibility to mycobacterial, viral, and fungal infections with malignancy and can be transmitted in an autosomal dominant pattern.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant and sporadic monocytopenia with susceptibility to mycobacteria, fungi, papillomaviruses, and myelodysplasia. 2004 Jul 66
Adoptive immunotherapy with cytotoxic T cells has shown promising clinical results in patients with
metastatic melanoma
and post-transplant-associated viral infections. However, the antitumor effect of adoptively transferred tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) is impaired by the limited capacity of these cells to expand within the tumor microenvironment. Administration of interleukin 2 (IL-2) has been used to overcome this limitation, but the systemic toxicity and the expansion of unwanted cells, including regulatory T cells, limit the clinical value of this strategy. To discover whether transgenic expression of lymphokines by the CTLs themselves might overcome these limitations, we evaluated the effects of transgenic expression of IL-2 and IL-15 in our model of
Epstein
-Barr Virus-specific CTLs (EBV-CTLs). We found that transgenic expression of IL-2 or IL-15 increased the expansion of EBV-CTLs in vitro and that these gene-modified EBV-CTL had enhanced antitumor activity, while maintaining their antigen-specificity. Although the proliferation of these cytokine gene transduced CTLs remained strictly antigen dependent, clinical application of this approach likely requires the inclusion of a suicide gene to deal with the potential development of T-cell mutants with autonomous growth. We found that the incorporation of an inducible caspase-9 suicide gene allowed efficient elimination of transgenic CTLs after exposure to a chemical inducer of dimerization, thereby increasing the safety and feasibility of the approach.
...
PMID:Gene therapy to improve function of T cells for adoptive immunotherapy. 2068 64
Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) for cancers using autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) can induce immune responses and antitumor activity in
metastatic melanoma
patients. Here, we aimed to assess the safety and antitumor activity of ACT using expanded TILs following concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) in patients with locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). Twenty-three newly diagnosed, locoregionally advanced NPC patients were enrolled, of whom 20 received a single-dose of TIL infusion following CCRT. All treated patients were assessed for toxicity, survival and clinical and immunologic responses. Correlations between immunological responses and treatment effectiveness were further studied. Only mild adverse events (AEs), including Grade 3 neutropenia (1/23, 5%) consistent with immune-related causes, were observed. Nineteen of 20 patients exhibited an objective antitumor response, and 18 patients displayed disease-free survival longer than 12 mo after ACT. A measurable plasma
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) load was detected in 14 patients at diagnosis, but a measurable EBV load was not found in patients after one week of ACT, and the plasma EBV load remained undetectable in 17 patients at 6 mo after ACT. Expansion and persistence of T cells specific for EBV antigens in peripheral blood following TIL therapy were observed in 13 patients. The apparent positive correlation between tumor regression and the expansion of T cells specific for EBV was further investigated in four patients. This study shows that NPC patients can tolerate ACT with TILs following CCRT and that this treatment results in sustained antitumor activity and anti-EBV immune responses. A larger phase II trial is in progress.
...
PMID:Phase I trial of adoptively transferred tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte immunotherapy following concurrent chemoradiotherapy in patients with locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma. 2594 75
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