| Literature DB >> 12799629 |
R Handgretinger1, W Leung, K Ihm, P Lang, T Klingebiel, D Niethammer.
Abstract
We analysed the effect of graft-contaminating tumour cells on the long-term survival of 24 patients with high-risk neuroblastoma and found that patients whose grafts contained detectable neuroblastoma cells had a significantly higher probability of survival than did patients with no detectable tumour cells. Estimated contamination of the graft by more than 2000 tumour cells was associated with a significantly higher probability of survival than contamination with fewer tumour cells. We hypothesise that the presence of a critical number of graft-contaminating neuroblastoma cells can elicit a protective antitumour immune response after autologous transplantation.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12799629 PMCID: PMC2741120 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6601014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Kaplan–Meier analysis of the probability of relapse-free survival after autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation with and without detectable neuroblastoma cells in the graft.
Figure 2(A) Scatterplot analysis comparing the estimated absolute number of neuroblastoma cells in the autografts of patients who did and did not survive (P=0.01). (B) Comparison of relapse-free survival of patients whose autografts were estimated to contain more than 2000 cells or fewer than 2000 cells (P=0.006).