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Tumoricidal activity of macrophages isolated from human ascitic and solid ovarian carcinomas: Augmentation by interferon, lymphokines and endotoxin

✍ Scribed by Giuseppe Peri; Nadia Polentarutti; Cristiana Sessa; Costantino Mangioni; Alberto Mantovani


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1981
Tongue
French
Weight
915 KB
Volume
28
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Peripheral blood monocytes and macrophages from ascitic or solid tumors were obtained from 50 patients with advanced (Stage III or IV) ovarian carcinoma. Blood monocytes and peritoneal macrophages from 76 patients undergoing surgery for benign gynecological diseases were used as controls. Macrophages were 30% (range 0.2–62) and 2% (range 0.2–4) of mononuclear cell suspensions from ascitic and solid tumors, respectively. Cytolytic activity was measured as release of [^3^H]‐thy‐midine from prelabelled mKSATUS (TU5) target cells at an effector to target cell ratio of 20:1. Peripheral blood monocytes and tumor‐associated macrophages had baseline cytotoxicity lower than or similar to that of control peripheral blood and peritoneal macrophages respectively. In vitro exposure to partially purified human fibroblast interferon, lymphokine supernatants or endotoxin augmented the cytotoxicity of mononuclear phagocytes, and no significant difference was observed between control and ovarian cancer effector cells from peritoneal effusions. In four patients, macrophages were isolated from the solid tumor or from the malignant effusion and tested in parallel: in two out of four subjects, macrophages from the solid neoplasm showed defective cytotoxicity compared to ascites effector cells from the same subjet. When primary ovarian carcinoma cultures were used as targets, tumor cells from two out of five patients tested were relatively resistant to activated macrophage cytotoxicity. Thus, tumor‐associates macrophages from ascitic or solid ovarian neoplasms showed no evidence of activation, in terms of spontaneous cytotoxicity or responsiveness to stimuli: it appears unlikely that small numbers of non‐activated macrophages present within primary ovarian carcinomas act as a significant mechanism of restraint of neoplastic growth, at least at this anatomical site.


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✍ Alberto Mantovani; Jack H. Dean; Thomas R. Jerrells; Ronald B. Herberman 📂 Article 📅 1980 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 French ⚖ 902 KB

## Abstract Monocytes were separated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of normal human donors by adherence on plastic conditioned by cell lines (microexudatecoated plastic) and harvested by exposure to ethylene diamine tetra‐acetic acid. Cytolytic activity was tested by incubating effector ce