Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P14784 (IL-2 receptor)
3,849 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mitoxantrone (DHAD), an anthracenedione with antineoplastic properties similar to doxorubicin, was tested for therapeutic efficacy and for immunomodulating action on lymphocyte subsets in 16 metastatic breast cancer patients, 12 of whom had been previously treated with chemotherapy. DHAD was given intravenously at a dose of 14 mg/m2 every 21 days. To evaluate total T lymphocytes (CD3), T helper (CD4), and T suppressor/cytotoxic cells (CD8) and the CD4/CD8 ratio, venous blood samples were drawn before and after the first DHAD cycle. Moreover, in 8/16 patients, B lymphocytes (CD20), T suppressor cells (CD8+/CD57+), T cytotoxic cells (CD8+/CD57-), NK (CD16) and IL-2 receptor-expressing cells (CD25) were also measured at the same time. An objective tumor response was achieved in 5/16 (31%) patients and the response rate was significantly higher in patients pretreated with hormone therapy alone than in those pretreated with chemotherapy. No relation was found between clinical response and changes in the CD4/CD8 ratio. Neither the mean number nor the percentage of CD3, CDA and CD8 cells observed after DHAD were significantly different with respect to those seen before. In contrast, the mean number of T suppressor cells, B lymphocytes and CD25-positive cells was significantly lower after than before DHAD administration, whereas no difference was seen in NK cells. These results confirm in humans the immunomodulating properties of DHAD previously described in experimental conditions. However, the DHAD-induced changes in lymphocyte subsets do not seem to be related to the clinical response in breast cancer.
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PMID:Mitoxantrone as a single agent in pretreated metastatic breast cancer: effects on T lymphocyte subsets and their relation to clinical response. 186 50

Previous studies in cancer patients demonstrated that granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) upregulated the interleukin (IL)-2 receptor on T lymphocytes and monocytes suggesting that subsequently administered IL-2 would produce greater immune effects. The authors treated 21 patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma and melanoma on a randomized phase I study to test this hypothesis. All 21 patients received a fixed dose of IL-2 (72,000 IU/kg every 8 hours for 5 days) administered intravenously as an inpatient. Patients were randomized to receive IL-2 alone or in combination with GM-CSF at a dose of 125 or 250 mcg/m /d (Sargramostim; Immunex Corporation, WA, U.S.A.) daily for 7 days by subcutaneous injection starting on day 1, the day before IL-2 treatment. The results from this study demonstrated that GM-CSF did not worsen the toxicities produced by IL-2 alone. Grade 3 confusion occurred in four patients, three who received IL-2 alone. No partial or complete tumor responses were seen. Assays of serum soluble IL-2 receptor (sIL2R) and neopterin, measures of T cell and monocyte activation, respectively, demonstrated a significant increase in sIL2R but not neopterin, 24 hours after the first dose of GM-CSF. In combination with IL-2, the higher dose of GM-CSF (250 mcg/m ) produced higher sIL2R levels on days 3 and 7 than the 125-mcg/m dose of GM-CSF or IL-2 alone. Although neopterin levels did not increase after 1 day of GM-CSF, the addition of IL-2 resulted in a significantly increased neopterin level on day 3 at the higher dose of GM-CSF. On day 7, neopterin levels in all three groups were similarly increased over baseline. Ten days after treatment, neopterin levels had returned to normal, but sIL2R levels remained markedly increased (12 fold) over baseline in the higher GM-CSF dose group. The authors conclude that 1) monocyte activation was not significantly enhanced by 1 day of GM-CSF treatment; 2) the 250-mcg/m GM-CSF dose plus IL-2 produced superior T cell activation compared with a lower dose of GM-CSF plus IL-2 or to IL-2 alone; and 3) the combination of GM-CSF and IL-2 was safe and tolerable but was not associated with any clinical responses.
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PMID:Immune effects of escalating doses of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor added to a fixed, low-dose, inpatient interleukin-2 regimen: a randomized phase I trial in patients with metastatic melanoma and renal cell carcinoma. 1261