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Query: UMLS:C0278883 (
metastatic melanoma
)
6,224
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The immunological and haematological effects of continuous infusion of recombinant human
interleukin-2
(rhIL-2) in 6 patients with
metastatic melanoma
and 6 with disseminated renal cell carcinoma are reported. In patients with malignant melanoma dacarbazine was given before IL-2; in renal cell carcinoma IL-2 alone was given. In malignant melanoma, 1 complete (CR) and 1 partial response (PR) were seen; 2 patients had stable disease (SD) and 2 progressive disease (PD). In renal cell carcinoma 4 patients had SD and 2 PD. Toxicity of IL-2 therapy was minimal. All patients showed increased cytotoxicity, that was not major histocompatibility complex restricted, towards target cells sensitive and insensitive to natural killer cells. These activities varied between individual patients and were less marked in cases of renal cell carcinoma. Cellular proliferative responses increased in all patients, being consistently higher following the first course of therapy, as did HLA-DR, CD16 and CD25 activation marker expression. Hypersegmentation of neutrophils and eosinophilia were commonly observed, and in renal cell carcinoma these changes were accompanied by abnormal lymphocyte morphology.
...
PMID:Malignant melanoma and renal cell carcinoma: immunological and haematological effects of recombinant human interleukin-2. 183 84
Twenty-five assessable patients with
metastatic melanoma
have been entered in a multicenter phase II study of two induction cycles of human recombinant
interleukin-2
(IL2), 18 x 10(6) IU/m2/d continuous intravenous (IV) infusion on days 1 to 5 and days 12 to 17. Dacarbazine (DTIC), 850 mg/m2 IV bolus was given on day 26. The cycle was repeated at 5 weeks. Maintenance therapy was scheduled 3 weeks after the completion of induction treatment, consisting of IL2, 18 x 10(6) IU/m2/d for 5 days alternating with DTIC, 850 mg/m2 IV every 3 weeks, for a total of 18 weeks. Six patients responded (24%); two complete and four partial. Stable disease was seen in five patients. None of the six patients with more than two sites of metastases responded. Maximum response was observed in the first 3 months of treatment. Progression-free periods of 6 months and longer were seen in the two complete responders (8 and 17+ months), in two of the four partial responders (7 and 12+ months), and in three of the five patients with stable disease (9+, 15, and 17+ months). Toxicity included fever, skin rash, fatigue, anorexia, and diarrhea in most patients. Two patients had a weight gain of more than 10%. Eight patients needed intensive care for the observation and treatment of a myocardial injury (one patient), ventricular tachycardia (one), hypotension and oliguria (four), and sepsis (two). Sequential treatment with IL2 and DTIC appears to be effective but not clearly better than could be expected of IL2 alone.
...
PMID:Sequential administration of recombinant human interleukin-2 and dacarbazine in metastatic melanoma: a multicenter phase II study. 187 25
Since February, 1990 we have evaluated a sequential form of chemoimmunotherapy as an investigative method for the treatment of
metastatic melanoma
. A cycle of therapy consisted of: carmustine (150 mg/m2) on day 1, dacarbazine (220 mg/m2) and cisplatin (25 mg/m2) on days 1 through 3 and 22 through 24,
interleukin-2
(1.5 x 10(6) IU/m2 every 8 hours) and alpha-interferon (IFN alpha) (6.0 x 10(6) IU/m2 subcutaneously once daily) on days 4 through 8 and 17 through 21, and tamoxifen 10 mg orally twice daily for 6 weeks. Patients were evaluated for response 2 to 3 weeks after completing each cycle of therapy. Thirty-nine patients had been entered into this trial as of December 1, 1990, and 25 had completed at least one cycle of therapy and have been evaluated for response. The responses are as follows: complete response, six of 25 (24%); partial response, nine of 25 (36%); minor response, one of 25 (4%); stable disease, eight of 25 (32%); and progressive disease, one of 25 (4%). Median response duration has not been reached but is at least 5 months. Immunologic alterations associated with response and associated toxicity data will be presented.
...
PMID:Sequential chemoimmunotherapy for metastatic melanoma. 194 35
High-dose
interleukin-2
(
IL-2
) immunotherapy can cause hypotension, respiratory distress, interstitial edema, and thrombocytopenia, similar to endotoxic shock. We have observed that
IL-2
has no direct effect on coagulation factors in vitro, but it has been observed to alter the coagulant properties of vascular endothelium. Accordingly, we investigated the possibility that
IL-2
infusions initiate plasma fibrinolysis and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). We studied the clinical course, platelet count, and coagulation profile in response to
IL-2
infusion in seven patients, two with
metastatic melanoma
and five with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. Every patient experienced hemodynamic instability and thrombocytopenia, and one patient suffered an unusual complication, mesenteric thrombosis. No patient had appreciable changes in the prothrombin time or the partial thromboplastin time, nor did factors V or VIII decline in the two patients observed. In four patients examined, we found decreased titers of Hageman factor (factor XII), high molecular weight kininogen, prekallikrein, and plasma thromboplastin antecedent, as if these had been consumed by reactions of the intrinsic pathway of thrombin formation. Circulating D-dimer fragments were found in the plasma of every patient at some point during each infusion cycle, and we observed decreased titers of plasminogen in the four patients just mentioned, suggesting that
IL-2
infusions initiated fibrinolysis. Taken together, the clotting factor derangements and related toxicity phenomena cannot be ascribed firmly to DIC. Activation of the intrinsic (contact) system of coagulation, however, may provide one link between the vascular endothelial surface alterations caused by
IL-2
infusions and the development of the systemic toxicity that resembles septic shock.
...
PMID:Fibrinolysis, thrombocytopenia, and coagulation abnormalities complicating high-dose interleukin-2 immunotherapy. 198 12
Twenty-nine patients with biopsy-confirmed
metastatic melanoma
(17) or metastatic renal cell carcinoma (12) were treated with escalating doses or recombinant human
interleukin-2
(
IL-2
) administered as weekly 24-h intravenous infusions. Patients received from 3 to 12 x 10(6) C.U./m2 (18-72 x 10(6) I.U./m2) weekly over a treatment period of 1 to 16 weeks, with a median of eight weekly cycles administered. Patients in all treatment groups experienced non-life-threatening systemic side effects consisting of fever, nausea, vomiting, fluid retention, and diarrhea. Grade III hypotension was seen in four of six patients (67%) at 12 x 10(6) C.U./m2, and represented the dose-limiting toxicity. Grade IV hypotension occurred in 1 of 14 patients at 6 x 10(6) C.U./m2; no other grade IV toxicities were observed. Grade III fever occurred in 3 of 11 patients (27%) treated at 3 x 10(6) C.U./m2, 3 of 14 patients (21%) at 6 x 10(6) C.U./m2, and 3 of 6 patients (50%) at 9 x 10(6) C.U./m2. An objective response was observed in 3 of 28 evaluable patients (10%): 1 complete response and 1 partial response in renal cell cancer, and 1 partial response in a melanoma patient. We conclude that for future studies, the recommended dose of
IL-2
given as a weekly 24-h infusion is 9 x 10(6) C.U./m2 and that a low rate of objective tumor response can be obtained in patients with melanoma and renal cell carcinoma using this regimen.
...
PMID:Weekly 24-hour continuous infusion interleukin-2 for metastatic melanoma and renal cell carcinoma: a phase I study. 201 99
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
.
...
PMID:In vivo proliferation of adoptively transferred tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in mice. 204 92
Thirteen previously untreated patients with
metastatic melanoma
entered into a phase II chemo-immunotherapy trial were monitored immunologically during treatment. Treatment consisted of dacarbazine (DTIC) 750 mg/m2 and cisplatin 100 mg/m2 on day 1 followed by
interleukin-2
(
IL-2
) 4 x 10(6) U/m2 by daily intravenous bolus on days 12-16 and 19-23. Cycles were repeated every 28 days. On days 1 (pretreatment), 12, 16, and 23 of each cycle, lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell and natural killer cell activity as well as total lymphocyte count and CD3, CD4, CD8, and CD56 lymphocyte subsets were analyzed. Despite pretreatment with full-dose cytotoxic chemotherapy, all patients were able to respond immunologically to
IL-2
. Spontaneous LAK cell activity was generated by the end of each course of
IL-2
administration and persisted for at least 5 days thereafter. Lymphocytosis was maximum at 5 days after
IL-2
administration and included increased numbers of all measured lymphocyte subsets.
IL-2
administration caused a relative increase in CD56+ cells and a relative decrease in CD3+ cells. There was a direct correlation between the increase in LAK cell activity and the increase in CD56+ lymphocytes. Antitumor responses occurred in five patients but these responses did not correlate with any of the measured changes in LAK activity or lymphocyte subsets. DTIC and cisplatin administered in this schedule does not abrogate the immunological effects of
IL-2
.
...
PMID:Sequential dacarbazine/cisplatin and interleukin-2 in metastatic melanoma: immunological effects of therapy. 204 95
Alteration in interactions between tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and tumor cells after chemotherapy or immunotherapy was studied in
metastatic melanoma
patients. Tumors were harvested from surgical specimens 17 days after the end of chemotherapy with cisplatin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (CVD). Tumors of nonlymph-node metastases from two responders yielded neither TILs nor tumor cells, whereas those from all four nonresponders had both TILs [(1.1-13.8) x 10(6) cells/g tumor] and tumor cells [(2.8-30.8) x 10(6) cells/g tumor). Tumors of lymph node metastases from nine patients yielded substantial numbers both of TILs and tumor cells, regardless of different clinical responses, except with one complete responder, whose tumor did not contain tumor cells. The mean increase of TILs from these tumors (n = 14) 3-4 weeks after incubation with 200 U/ml recombinant
interleukin-2
(rIL-2) was 2.5-fold, whereas there was a 56-fold increase in TILs from untreated tumors (n = 3). CD3+ T cells predominated in TILs before and after expansion with IL-2. IL-2-activated TILs from five of six tumors tested displayed higher cytotoxicity against autologous tumor cells than against cells from any of three allogeneic tumors. Mean tumor cell numbers (10(6) cells/trial) obtained by serial needle biopsies for the same tumor in five patients decreased from 1.2 before therapy to 0.25 at day 4 of therapy (interferon alpha alone), and to 0.02 at day 8 (interferon alpha and IL-2). This decrease did not correlate with clinical responses. Yields (x 10(6) cells/g tumor) of TILs and tumor cells in subcutaneous melanomas obtained by excisional biopsies in one nonresponder under IL-2 therapy were respectively 0.2 and 1.1 before therapy (day 0), 0.1 and less than 0.01 during (day 7), 0.2 and less than 0.01 at the end of therapy (day 21), and 0.5 and 0.5 at the time of tumor progression (day 66). Yields of TILs and tumor cells in the other nonresponder were respectively 3 and 26 before (day 0), 16 and 3 during (day 7), and 0.4 and less than 0.01 at the end of IL-2 therapy (day 17), and 2.5 and 6 at the time of progression (day 62). TILs in these two patients before therapy proliferated well in culture with IL-2 (570- and 720-fold, respectively), and showed higher cytotoxicity against autologous tumor cells, whereas none of those from the five tumors biopsied during or at the end of IL-2 therapy proliferated. TILs at the time of progression showed modest proliferation (54- and 76-fold, respectively) and showed major-histocompatibility-complex-nonrestricted cytotoxicity. In summary, a decrease in the number of live tumor cells did not always correlate with clinical response in either therapy. CVD chemotherapy may simply impair IL-2-induced proliferation of TILs. IL-2 therapy may induce transient unresponsiveness of TILs to IL-2.
...
PMID:Alteration in interactions between tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and tumor cells in human melanomas after chemotherapy or immunotherapy. 205 68
Thirty-three patients with
metastatic melanoma
were treated in a phase II study with an intravenous continuous infusion (IVCI) of
interleukin-2
(
IL2
) given with lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells. The dose of
IL2
was the optimal priming dose for LAK-cell induction, followed by the maximally tolerated LAK-cell dose that could be given by an IVCI schedule as determined by a previous phase I trial. The CI schedule was chosen for evaluation because of a postulated reduction in toxicity with the possibility of administering a more prolonged
IL2
infusion and because greater rebound lymphocytosis and LAK-cell generation had been reported using this dose and schedule. The 33 patients were similar in age, performance status, and sites of disease to those treated in previous
IL2
trials. All patients were assessable for response and toxicity. One patient (3%) achieved a partial response of 10 months duration. There were no other clinically significant responses. Significant toxicity included hypotension requiring pressors (45%), dyspnea (36%), renal insufficiency (24%), hepatic dysfunction (66%), and cardiac arrhythmias (18%). These toxicities reversed with cessation of the infusion. There were four deaths during the first 30 days of treatment, three from infection (one related to central line, one related to LAK cells, one related to tumor), and one from tumor-related hemorrhage. Toxicity was unexpectedly high and at least comparable to that seen in previous studies using a high-dose IV bolus schedule of
IL2
. When comparing the IVCI schedule with high-dose bolus
IL2
to LAK cells in nonrandomized but sequential studies in patients with advanced melanoma, it appears that CI
IL2
is less efficacious.
...
PMID:A phase II study of high-dose continuous infusion interleukin-2 with lymphokine-activated killer cells in patients with metastatic melanoma. 206 60
A murine model of pulmonary B16 melanoma was used to study the infiltration into metastases of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and adherent lymphokine-activated killer (A-LAK) cells and, specifically, to study whether A-LAK cells are able to leave the tumor microcirculation and establish cell-to-cell contact with malignant cells. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrated that A-LAK cells accumulated in metastases twice as efficiently as LAK cells during
interleukin-2
stimulation. Electron microscopy of pulmonary metastases 16 hours after administration of 2.5 x 10(7) A-LAK cells revealed A-LAK cells, identified by the presence of typical two-compartment granules, in direct contact with melanoma cells. This finding was confirmed by using A-LAK cells prelabeled with polycationized ferritin. In conclusion, our observations demonstrate unambiguously the ability of adoptively transferred A-LAK cells to establish contact with extravascular
metastatic melanoma
cells.
...
PMID:Establishment of cell-to-cell contact by adoptively transferred adherent lymphokine-activated killer cells with metastatic murine melanoma cells. 206 37
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