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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Locoregional therapy with polyethylene-glycol-modified interleukin-2 of an intradermally growing hepatocellular carcinoma in the guinea pig induces T-cell-mediated antitumor activity.

Therapy with repeated intratumoral and perilymphatic administration of relatively low doses of polyethylene-glycol(PEG)-modified interleukin-2 (IL-2) in the syngeneic guinea pig line 10 (L10) hepatocarcinoma results in significant local tumor growth inhibition and a delay in development of regional lymph node metastases of more than 3 weeks when compared to controls. Occasionally animals are cured of tumor. The mechanism of this antitumor activity was studied. The antitumor activity of locoregionally administered PEG-IL-2 was abrogated by pretreatment with polyclonal anti-thymocyte serum, indicating that the observed tumor growth inhibition was a T-cell-mediated phenomenon. Besides the locoregional tumor growth inhibition, a systemic effect was recorded as the growth of a second tumor cell inoculum at the contralateral side was inhibited as well. Furthermore, those animals cured after PEG-IL-2 therapy developed specific immunity against the L10 tumor and this immunity could be transferred to naive animals by spleen cells. Immunohistological observations of the tumor site revealed a slight increase of helper and cytotoxic T cell subpopulations after PEG-IL-2 therapy. More pronounced, however, was the rise in number of eosinophilic granulocytes present in the stroma surrounding the tumor cells. Involvement of cytotoxic cells in the antitumor effects of PEG-IL-2 could not be demonstrated: regional lymph node cells and spleen cells obtained immediately after therapy (day 15) or on day 21 showed no cytotoxic activity in vitro against L10, K562, Daudi and line 1 (L1) target cells. In conclusion, locoregional therapy with PEG-IL-2 induced a a systemic T-cell-mediated antitumor response. As no cytotoxic T cell activity was measured, however, the underlying mechanism is most likely a T-helper response. Eosinophils at the tumor site may be tumoricidal but further experiments must reveal the role of these cells in the PEG-IL-2-induced tumor regression.[1]

References

  1. Locoregional therapy with polyethylene-glycol-modified interleukin-2 of an intradermally growing hepatocellular carcinoma in the guinea pig induces T-cell-mediated antitumor activity. Balemans, L.T., Mattijssen, V., Steerenberg, P.A., Van Driel, B.E., De Mulder, P.H., Den Otter, W. Cancer Immunol. Immunother. (1993) [Pubmed]
 
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