𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
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Surgical adjuvant immunotherapy for colorectal cancer

✍ Scribed by Warren E. Enker; Janet L. Jacobitz; Karen Craft; Robert W. Wissler


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1978
Tongue
English
Weight
550 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-4790

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

One hundred forty‐four Wistar‐Furth rats in 12 therapeutic groups have been studied in a long‐term comparison of the effectiveness of nonspecific immunotherapy with MER (methanol extraction residue) vs active‐specific immunotherapy with neuraminidase‐modified tumor cells. Six months after surgical adjuvant immunotherapy a 100% improvement in survival was achieved with MER immunotherapy compared to untreated control animals. In addition, the use of MER enhanced the value of active‐specific immunotherapy where both modalities were combined in sequence. The predicted value of MER‐BCG (Bacillus Calmette‐Guerin) for the immunotherapy of solid tumors was borne out by these results suggesting that present ongoing clinical trials of MER as adjuvant therapy for large bowel cancer should prove to be successful if properly controlled. The pattern of survival in these experiments suggests that surgical adjuvant immunotherapy is cytostatic rather than cytocidal, and implies the need for long‐term, repeated immunizations.


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## immunotherapy on the prognosis of colorectal cancer operated for cure After radical surgery for colorectal cancer, 178 patients with a Dukes' B or C tumour were randomly assigned to one of three groups: A , controls (n=62); B, chemotherapy (n=59); C, immunotherapy (n =57). Randomization criteri