Lysis of autologous tumor cells by blood lymphocytes tested at the time of surgery
✍ Scribed by Farkas Vánky; Eva Klein; Jan Willems; Kim Böök; Torbjörn Ivert; Arpád Péterffy; Ulf Nilsonne; Andris Kreicbergs; Tomas Aparisi
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 569 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-7004
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Lymphocyte-mediated lysis of autologous tumor cells (autologous lymphocyte cytotoxocity ALC) was tested at the time of surgery in 108 patients (46 squamous cell carcinomas of the lung, 25 adenocarcinomas of the lung, 19 soft tissue sarcomas and 18 osteosarcomas). The clinical course of these patients in relation to the test resuits has been published previously. The group was evaluated again after an extended observation time, now with a mean of 80.2 months (range 36-108). The test was rarely positive in patients with metastasis (2 out of 28 experiments).
There was a correlation between the ALC results and the postsurgical clinical course for patients without detectable metastasis in that (1) a negative test was invariably a bad prognostic sign, i.e., all 32 patients with negative ALC died within 3 years (mean survival time 16.1 months). ( ) The remission and survival times were longer for the ALC positive patients (p< 0.001). (3) All 37 individuals who are alive at present without recurrence belong to the reactive group.
The ALC results correlated with the clinical course in 88% of patients. The correlation was highest for the groups of soft tissue sarcoma and adenocarcinoma of the lung. There was no correlation between killing of K562 cells and ALC, or between lymphoproliferative response to PHA and ALC reactivity.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Blood lymphocyte subsets of various densities from 14 healthy donors and 25 patients with solid tumors were used in tests for cytotoxicity against allogeneic or autologous tumor cells. The allogeneic combinations comprised 36 tests on 28 tumors. In these the unmanipulated total lymphocyte population
## Abstract Human lymphocytes and their subpopulations from the peripheral blood and pleural effusions of cancer patients were tested for cytotoxicity against fresh tumor cells isolated from carcinomatous pleural effusions of the same patients. Fresh tumor cells were relatively resistant to lysis b
Peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) were isolated from six cancer patients and cultured in the presence of 100 units/ml of recombinant interleukin 2 (IL2). Both IL2-stimulated PBL (IL2-PBL) and IL2-stimulated TIL (IL2-TIL) lysed fresh and short-term cultured a
In experiments performed with tumor cells isolated from surgical specimens and lymphocytes collected at the time of surgery, tumor cells are often lysed by blood lymphocytes. Some of the effectors are present in the high-density T-cell subset. This population has little or no anti-K562 activity. For