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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (
primary tumor
)
20,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study investigates the ability of recombinant
interleukin 12
(rIL-12) to modulate the growth of a
primary tumor
as well as the outgrowth of metastatic tumor cells in an ovarian carcinoma (OV-HM) model. This aggressive tumor displayed rapid growth of the
primary tumor
mass, high incidence of metastases to lung and lymph nodes, and invasion from the primary s.c. site to the peritoneal cavity. Starting 12 days after s.c. tumor cell implantation, several i.p. injections of rIL-12 at 2-3 day intervals resulted in regression of growing tumors. These treated mice did not show signs of metastases or tumor recurrence at the original site. One month after tumor implantation, untreated mice did not have visible lung metastasis, but some did have palpable lymph nodes. At this stage, the primary tumors of animals without palpable lymph nodes were surgically resected. When examined 2 months later, most animals had developed lymph node and lung metastases. In contrast, rIL-12 injections after tumor resection inhibited the development of metastases in both lung and lymph nodes. This contrasted with the failure of IL-2 to prevent metastases. Even for mice already showing signs of lymph node metastases or invasion of the abdominal wall, rIL-12 administration after tumor resection prevented further invasion to the peritoneal cavity and growth of metastatic tumor cells in lung. It was somewhat surprising that the IL-12 treatment of animals after 1 month of tumor growth without resection also resulted in complete tumor regression, as well as eradication of micrometastasis that would have occurred before the treatment. Moreover, they exhibited resistance to a rechallenge with the same tumor but not with a second tumor. Thus, this tumor system provides a relevant model to clinical situations in terms of treatment of advanced tumors and metastases. These results also indicate that IL-12 can induce a curative immune response, even in the face of an aggressive micrometastasizing tumor.
...
PMID:Administration of recombinant interleukin 12 prevents outgrowth of tumor cells metastasizing spontaneously to lung and lymph nodes. 767 Dec 53
Interleukin 12
(IL-12) has a pivotal role in controlling cell-mediated immunity through a number of important biological activities, such as secretion of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). In this review, we report our recent results regarding the antitumor and antimetastatic effects of IL-12. Five intraperitoneal injections of recombinant IL-12 (rIL-12) into mice bearing subcutaneous tumors (CSA1M fibrosarcoma) induced complete tumor regression, irrespective of whether tumors were at early or late stages of growth. Furthermore, IL-12-treated mice that had rejected the
primary tumor
exhibited complete resistance to rechallenge with the same tumor but did not reject a second syngeneic tumor. Immunohistochemical analyses following IL-12 treatment revealed that CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells had infiltrated the tumor. More importantly, IFN-gamma mRNA expression was observed in fresh tumor masses from tumor-bearing mice receiving IL-12 treatment. The importance of IFN-gamma was further demonstrated by the observation that systemic administration of anti-IFN-gamma monoclonal antibody prior to IL-12 treatment completely abrogated the antitumor effect of IL-12. We next investigated the ability of rIL-12 to modulate the outgrowth of metastatic tumor cells in an ovarian carcinoma (OV-HM) model. This aggressive tumor showed rapid growth of the
primary tumor
mass, a high incidence of metastases to the lung and lymph nodes, and invasion from the primary subcutaneous site into the peritoneal cavity. At approximately 1 month after tumor implantation, primary tumors in animals without palpable lymph nodes were surgically resected. When examined 2 months later, most animals had developed lymph node and lung metastases. In contrast, rIL-12 injections following tumor resection inhibited the development of metastases in both the lung and lymph nodes. Even in mice showing signs of lymph node metastases or invasion of the abdominal wall before
primary tumor
resection, rIL-12 administration following tumor resection prevented further invasion into the peritoneal cavity and metastatic tumor cell growth in the lung. Our results demonstrate that administration of rIL-12 to tumor-bearing mice results in tumor regression through mechanisms involving efficient IFN-gamma production by antitumor T-cells at tumor sites in situ and the establishment of a tumor-specific protective immune response. The results also indicate that IL-12 can induce a curative immune response in the face of an aggressive micrometastasizing tumor.
...
PMID:Antitumor and antimetastatic effects of interleukin 12. 876 11
Although tumor-specific T lymphocytes recognize tumor-associated antigens (TAA) present on their cell surface via major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, T cells require other activating signals. These are provided by costimulatory molecules, including B7-1 (CD80), B7-2 (CD86) and intercellular adhesive molecule 1 (ICAM-1; CD54). Transfecting mouse tumor cell lines with the B7 gene can lead to
primary tumor
rejection and the establishment of protective immunity. However, some studies have shown that the B7 effect upon T-cell-dependent tumor immunity is limited. Therefore, we examined the antitumor effects of recombinant
interleukin 12
(IL-12) and genetically engineered glioma cells expressing B7-1 or both B7-1 and ICAM-1. Vaccination of mice with B7-1-expressing tumor cells substantially inhibited the growth of subcutaneously inoculated gliomas but not those located in the brain. Vaccination with B7-1-expressing tumor cells and systemic recombinant IL-12 (rIL-12) was more effective than either B7-1-expressing tumor cells or rIL-12 alone. Our murine brain tumor model also showed that vaccination with tumor cells expressing both B7-1 and ICAM-1 combined with rIL-12 prolonged survival. We have demonstrated the therapeutic potential of vaccination with rIL-12 and tumor cells expressing both B7-1 and ICAM-1 in the control of glioma growth.
...
PMID:Induction of effective antitumor immunity in a mouse brain tumor model using B7-1 (CD80) and intercellular adhesive molecule 1 (ICAM-1; CD54) transfection and recombinant interleukin 12. 1041 70
We have documented previously that adenovirus-mediated
interleukin 12
(IL-12) gene therapy is effective for orthotopic tumor control and suppression of pre-established metastases in a preclinical prostate cancer model (Y. Nasu et al., Gene Ther., 6: 338-349, 1999). In this report, we directly compare the effectiveness of an adenovirus that expresses both IL-12 and the costimulatory molecule B7-1 (AdmIL12/B7) with one that expresses IL-12 alone (AdmIL-12) using the poorly immunogenic RM-9 orthotopic murine model of prostate cancer. We document AdmIL-12/B7-mediated secretion of IL-12 and increased surface expression of B7-1 in infected RM-9 tumor cells. A significant reduction in orthotopic tumor size and increased survival was demonstrated in mice treated with a single orthotopic injection of AdmIL-12/B7 compared with AdmIL-12 or controls. Six of 19 animals treated with AdmIL-12/B7 survived long term with apparent eradication of the
primary tumor
in contrast to one of 38 animals in the AdmIL-12-treated group. Orthotopic treatment of tumors with both vectors led to an infiltration of both CD4+ and CD8+ immunoreactive cells, with AdmIL-12/B7 treatment having a more prolonged infiltration of CD8+ cells. AdmIL-12/B7 was also more effective than AdmIL-12 or controls at suppression of pre-established metastases. We further developed a vaccine model based on s.c. injection of infected, irradiated RM-9 cells and found that both AdmIL-12 and AdmIL-12/B7 are effective at suppressing the development and growth of challenge orthotopic tumors using this protocol.
...
PMID:Prostate cancer gene therapy: comparison of adenovirus-mediated expression of interleukin 12 with interleukin 12 plus B7-1 for in situ gene therapy and gene-modified, cell-based vaccines. 1105 Dec 63
We have reported that particle-mediated
interleukin 12
(IL-12) gene transfer into the skin overlying the local tumor inhibits systemic metastases. To further characterize this effect, we compared the antitumor and antimetastatic effects of IL-12 cDNA delivered at the local tumor site versus at a site distant from the
primary tumor
, in a spontaneous metastasis model of LLC-F5 tumor. Local IL-12 gene delivery into the skin overlying the intradermal tumor (local IL-12 treatment) on days 7, 9, and 11 after tumor implantation resulted in the most suppression of the growth of the primary LLC-F5 tumor, whereas IL-12 gene transfer into the skin distant from the tumor (distant IL-12 treatment) was less effective. In contrast, both local IL-12 and distant IL-12 treatment, followed by tumor excision, inhibited lung metastases to a similar extent, resulting in significantly extended survival of test mice. The results of in vivo studies using depleting anti-asialo GM1 antibody and anti-CD4/anti-CD8 monoclonal antibodies, or neutralizing anti-interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) monoclonal antibody demonstrated that natural killer (NK) cells, CD8(+) T cells, and IFN-gamma contributed to the antimetastatic effects in both treatment groups. Furthermore, the levels of mRNA expression of vascular endothelial growth factor and matrix methalloproteinase 9 at the tumor microenvironment were suppressed after both local and distant IL-12 treatment. These results suggest that the current particle-mediated IL-12 gene delivery in the spontaneous LLC-F5 metastasis model can confer antimetastatic activities, irrespective of the gene transfection site, via a combination of several mechanisms involving CD8(+) T cells, NK cells, IFN-gamma, and antiangiogenesis.
...
PMID:Interleukin 12 gene transfer into skin distant from the tumor site elicits antimetastatic effects equivalent to local gene transfer. 1117 52
Tumor cells, injected s.c., were maintained until spontaneous metastases to the lungs were established in all of the mice. Mice were then treated with a single dose of cytokine-encapsulated biodegradable microspheres injected directly into primary s.c. tumors to achieve a local and sustained release of
interleukin 12
(IL-12), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), or a combination of these cytokines to the tumor microenvironment. The s.c. tumors were surgically excised 6 days after microsphere injections, and the mice were monitored for recurrence of the
primary tumor
, survival, and progression of metastatic disease. Combined neoadjuvant treatment with IL-12 and GM-CSF microspheres was superior to all other treatments in reducing the recurrence of primary tumors, enhancing postoperative survival, and suppressing established metastatic disease. Long-term survival analysis demonstrated that intratumoral injection of IL-12 + GM-CSF-loaded microspheres resulted in the complete cure of disseminated disease in the majority of the animals. The addition of systemic low-dose IL-2 therapy to the treatment protocol resulted in the loss of the antitumor activity induced by IL-12 + GM-CSF treatment. In vivo lymphocyte subset depletions established that both T- and natural killer-cell subsets were required for the suppression of primary and metastatic tumors. Long-term, tumor-specific T-cell activity was demonstrated by immunohistochemical analysis of metastatic lesions, IFN-gamma enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot (ELISPOT) assays and tumor challenge studies. These results establish that neoadjuvant in situ tumor immunotherapy with IL-12 + GM-CSF microspheres induces both innate and adaptive antitumor immune responses resulting in the eradication of disseminated disease.
...
PMID:Cancer immunotherapy with interleukin 12 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-encapsulated microspheres: coinduction of innate and adaptive antitumor immunity and cure of disseminated disease. 1249 67
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is an incurable brain tumor resistant to standard treatment modalities such as surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. Since recurrent GBM tends to develop predominantly within the infiltrative rim surrounding the
primary tumor
focus, novel therapy strategies need in addition to focal tumor destruction to target this somewhat diffuse area. This is a phase I/II clinical study in adult patients with recurrent GBM which is aimed at evaluating biological safety, maximum tolerated dose, and antitumor efficacy of a genetically modified replication-disabled Semliki forest virus vector (SFV) carrying the human
interleukin 12
(IL-12) gene and encapsulated in cationic liposomes (LSFV-IL12). The vector will be administered in doses of 1 x 10(7)-1 x 10(9) infectious particles by continuous intratumoral infusion, thus exploiting the advantages of convection-enhanced drug delivery in the brain. The present protocol is also designed to investigate systemic and local immune response and to identify factors predicting tumor response to LSFV-IL12 therapy, such as volume of extracellular space of the tumor, volume of contrast enhancing lesion, and immune status of the patients. SFV, an insect alphavirus, infects mitotic and non-mitotic cells and triggers apoptosis in tumor cells within 48-72 h. Preclinical work with the LSFV-IL12 vector in breast and prostate cancer animal models demonstrated its biosafety and some antitumor efficacy. An ongoing phase I clinical study in patients with melanoma and renal cell carcinoma seems also to confirm the biosafety of intravenously administered vectors. This protocol will be the first study of SFV-IL12 therapy of human recurrent GBM.
...
PMID:Immunogene therapy of recurrent glioblastoma multiforme with a liposomally encapsulated replication-incompetent Semliki forest virus vector carrying the human interleukin-12 gene--a phase I/II clinical protocol. 1295 95
Cancer patients undergoing triple therapy (CPT-11, 5-fluorouracil, and leucovorin) often present with severe delayed diarrhea as a result of chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity and inflammation. RDP58 is a novel, anti-inflammatory, D-amino acid decapeptide that inhibits the production of tumor necrosis factor alpha, IFN-gamma, and
interleukin 12
, and has been shown to effectively inhibit clinical symptoms and intestinal inflammation in several rodent models of chemically induced colitis, nonhuman primates with spontaneous colitis, and humans with mild to moderate ulcerative colitis. We evaluated RDP58 as a potential protective agent in chemotherapy-induced GI inflammation. Oral administration of RDP58 significantly decreased the incidence of diarrhea and improved the survival rates of mice treated with toxic doses of CPT-11 or 5-fluorouracil. Histological analysis showed that RDP58 significantly reduced the destruction of the intestinal mucosa by inhibiting local overproduction of tumor necrosis factor alpha, IFN-gamma, and
interleukin 12
in vivo. Furthermore, RDP58 administration allowed the maximum tolerated dose of CPT-11 to be doubled in tumor-bearing mice resulting in significantly enhanced
primary tumor
responses and prolongation of time to relapse without a concomitant increase in GI toxicity. Our results suggest that RDP58 may have clinical utility in cancer therapy by preventing treatment-associated GI toxicity and potentially increasing the effectiveness of chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Oral RDP58 allows CPT-11 dose intensification for enhanced tumor response by decreasing gastrointestinal toxicity. 1510 94
Oncolytic viruses are an innovative therapeutic strategy for cancer, wherein viral replication and cytotoxicity are selective for tumor cells. Here we show the efficacy of systemically administered oncolytic viruses for the treatment of spontaneously arising tumors, specifically the use of oncolytic herpes simplex viruses (HSV) administered i.v. to treat spontaneously developing primary and metastatic prostate cancer in the transgenic TRAMP mouse, which recapitulates human prostate cancer progression. Four administrations of systemically delivered NV1023 virus, an HSV-1/HSV-2 oncolytic recombinant, to TRAMP mice at 12 or 18 weeks of age (presence of prostate adenocarcinoma or metastatic disease, respectively) inhibited
primary tumor
growth and metastases to lymph nodes. Expression of
interleukin 12
(IL-12) from NV1042 virus, a derivative of NV1023, was additionally effective, significantly reducing the frequency of development of prostate cancer and lung metastases, even when the mice were treated after the onset of metastasis at 18 weeks of age. NV1042-infected cells, as detected by 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-d-galactopyranoside staining for Lac Z expressed by the virus, were present in prostate tumors 1 week after the final virus injection and viral DNA was detected at 2 weeks after final virus injection by real-time PCR in primary and metastatic tumors but not in liver or blood. No toxicity was observed in any of the treated mice. The efficacy of the IL-12-expressing NV1042 virus in this aggressive prostate cancer model using a clinically relevant treatment paradigm merits its consideration for clinical studies.
...
PMID:Systemic therapy of spontaneous prostate cancer in transgenic mice with oncolytic herpes simplex viruses. 1790 46
Neuroblastoma (NB) is a challenging malignancy of the sympathetic nervous tissue characterized by a very poor prognosis. One important marker for NB is the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the first-step enzyme of catecholamine biosynthesis. We could show stable and high TH gene expression in 67 NB samples independent of the clinical stage. Based on this observation, we addressed the question of whether xenogeneic TH DNA vaccination is effective in inducing an anti-NB immune response. For this purpose, we generated three DNA vaccines based on pCMV-F3Ub and pBUD-CE4.1 plasmids encoding for human (h)THcDNA (A), hTH minigene (B), and hTHcDNA in combination with the proinflammatory cytokine
interleukin 12
(C), and tested prophylactic and therapeutic efficacy to suppress
primary tumor
growth and spontaneous metastasis. Here we report that xenogeneic TH DNA vaccination was effective in eradicating established primary tumors and inhibiting metastasis. Interestingly, this effect could not be enhanced by adding the Th1 cytokine
interleukin 12
. However, increased IFN-gamma production and NB cytotoxicity of effector cells harvested from vaccinated mice suggested the participation of tumor-specific CTLs in the immune response. The depletion of CD8(+)T cells completely abrogated the hTH vaccine-mediated anti-NB immune response. Furthermore, rechallenging of surviving mice resulted in reduced
primary tumor
growth, indicating the induction of a memory immune response. In conclusion, xenogeneic immunization with TH-derived DNA vaccines is effective against NB, and may open a new venue for a novel and effective immunotherapeutic strategy against this challenging childhood tumor.
...
PMID:Xenogeneic immunization with human tyrosine hydroxylase DNA vaccines suppresses growth of established neuroblastoma. 1967 53
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