Literature DB >> 8113848

Increased effectiveness of interferon alfa-2b following active specific immunotherapy for melanoma.

M S Mitchell1, J Jakowatz, W Harel, G Dean, L Stevenson, W D Boswell, S Groshen.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine whether interferon alfa-2b (IFN-alfa; intron-A, Schering Corp, Kenilworth, NJ) can induce a remission in patients previously treated with active specific immunotherapy (therapeutic melanoma vaccine) without response. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Eighteen patients with disseminated melanoma who had failed to respond to at least five injections of Melacine therapeutic melanoma vaccine (Ribi ImmunoChem Research, Inc, Hamilton, MT) were then treated IFN-alfa after a 4-week interval. IFN-alfa 5 or 6 x 10(6) U/m2 was self-administered three times a week subcutaneously by melanoma patients for at least 2 months. Computed tomographic (CT) scans of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain were performed within 4 weeks before treatment as a baseline, and then at 2-month intervals during treatment to evaluate response. All 18 patients were HLA-typed before treatment. The frequency of cytolytic T-cell precursors (pCTL) in the blood had been measured weekly in 13 of the patients during treatment with Melacine.
RESULTS: Eight of 18 patients (44.4%) had a major objective clinical response induced by IFN-alfa, including site-specific complete remissions in five. Responses lasted a median of 11 months. The median survival duration of the responders has not been reached, and exceeds 32 months. The group as a whole had a median survival duration of 10.1 months, and nonresponders lived 7.3 months. Cytolytic T-cell precursors had been increased by immunization in all five responding patients tested, but also in five of eight nonresponders. There was no association of response to IFN-alfa with specific HLA phenotypes, in contrast to our previous results with melanoma theraccine alone.
CONCLUSION: These data suggest an additive effect of active specific immunotherapy and IFN-alfa on the objective response rate, perhaps through upregulation of HLA molecules and tumor-associated antigens on the tumor cell by IFN-alfa, after immunization of the patient by Melacine. This treatment may have improved survival over that expected in metastatic melanoma.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8113848     DOI: 10.1200/JCO.1994.12.2.402

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Oncol        ISSN: 0732-183X            Impact factor:   44.544


  2 in total

1.  High-dose IL2 in metastatic melanoma: better survival in patients immunized with antigens from autologous tumor cell lines.

Authors:  Robert O Dillman; Carol Depriest; Stephanie E McClure
Journal:  Cancer Biother Radiopharm       Date:  2013-12-31       Impact factor: 3.099

2.  Intermittent interferon and polychemotherapy in metastatic melanoma.

Authors:  M S Vuoristo; P Gröhn; P Kellokumpu-Lehtinen; E Kumpulainen; M Turunen; M Korpela; H Joensuu; K Tiusanen; A Nevantaus
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 4.553

  2 in total

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