| Literature DB >> 2145536 |
G Tancini1, S Barni, R Rescaldani, G Fiorelli, S Vivani, P Lissoni.
Abstract
Neoplastic disease affect the immunity in cancer patients. The immune alterations in human neoplasms, however, need to be further defined. The present study was carried out to analyze T lymphocyte subsets in patients with solid tumors. The study included 93 patients suffering from early or metastatic solid neoplasms. T helper and T suppressor subsets were measured on venous blood samples by using flow cytometry and monoclonal antibodies. As controls, 58 healthy subjects were included in the study. The T mean helper/suppressor ratio (CD4/CD8) was significantly lower in metastatic cancer patients with respect to that observed either in controls or in patients without metastases. A low CD4/CD8 ratio was seen in 25 of 93 cancer patients (26.9%), 8 of whom had no metastases, while the other 17 showed a metastatic disease. Within the nonmetastatic group, the decline in the CD4/CD8 ratio was due to increases in the T suppressor subset alone in 7. On the contrary, the percentage of cases with decreased T helper subset was significantly higher in metastatic than in the nonmetastatic patients. The results of this study suggest that the decrease in the CD4/CD8 ratio mainly depends on an increase in T suppressor cells in patients without metastases whereas it is due to a decrease in the T helper subset in most patients with metastatic diseases.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2145536 DOI: 10.1159/000226852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncology ISSN: 0030-2414 Impact factor: 2.935