Literature DB >> 9650615

Interleukin-2 gene-modified allogeneic tumor cells for treatment of relapsed neuroblastoma.

L C Bowman1, M Grossmann, D Rill, M Brown, W Y Zhong, B Alexander, T Leimig, E Coustan-Smith, D Campana, J Jenkins, D Woods, M Brenner.   

Abstract

Tumor cells that have been genetically modified to express immunostimulatory genes will induce effective antitumor responses in a range of syngeneic animal models. For human applications, transduced autologous tumor cell lines are often difficult or impossible to prepare, so that there are strong incentives for substituting a standardized allogeneic tumor cell line. However, such lines may be inferior immunogens if they differ from host tumors in the antigens they express. We have evaluated the safety, immunostimulatory, and antitumor activity of an interleukin-2-secreting allogeneic neuroblastoma cell line in 12 children with relapsed stage IV neuroblastoma. They received two to four subcutaneous injections of cells in a dose-escalating schedule, up to a maximum of 10(8) cells per injection. There was induration and pruritus at the injection site, and skin biopsies revealed mild panniculitis with CD3+ cells surrounding scanty residual tumor cells. There was a limited but significant peripheral monocytosis. No patient showed any increase in direct cytotoxic effector function against the immunizing cell line, but 3 patients had a rise in the frequency of neuroblastoma-reactive cytotoxic T lymphocyte precursor cells. One child had > 90% tumor response (PR), 7 had stable disease, and 4 had progressive disease in response to vaccine alone. Although these results offer some encouragement for the continued pursuit of allogeneic vaccine strategies in human cancer, the antitumor immune responses we observed are inferior to those obtained in an earlier immunization study using autologous neuroblastoma cells. Hence, we suggest that this earlier approach remains preferable, its difficulties notwithstanding.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9650615     DOI: 10.1089/hum.1998.9.9-1303

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Gene Ther        ISSN: 1043-0342            Impact factor:   5.695


  17 in total

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Review 4.  Immunology and immunotherapy of neuroblastoma.

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Review 9.  Cellular immunotherapy for neuroblastoma: a review of current vaccine and adoptive T cell therapeutics.

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