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Effect of lymphokine-activated killer cells with or without radiation therapy against malignant brain tumors

Abstract

The use of autologous lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells to treat malignant brain tumors was evaluated in 10 patients, one with metastatic malignant melanoma and nine with malignant glioma. LAK cells were obtained by culturing autologous peripheral blood lymphocytes with human recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) for 7-28 days. All patients underwent surgery to remove as much tumor as possible and an Ommaya reservoir was implaced in the tumor cavity. Two of the 10 patients had received radiotherapy elsewhere, so were treated with LAK cells alone. Eight patients were treated with a combination of LAK cells and radiotherapy, using 1.8-2.0 Gy fractions given five times a week with a total dosage between 54 and 65 Gy. LAK cells and rIL-2 were injected to the tumor cavity via the Ommaya reservoir once a week for inpatients and once a month for outpatients. The duration of the LAK therapy ranged from 3 to 23 months (mean 13.7 mos). Neuroimaging evaluation revealed two complete responses, three partial responses, four no changes, and one progressive disease. In one patient with pontine glioma, the Karnofsky performance score was raised from 20 to 60. There were no side effects after the injection of LAK cells and rIL-2. The results  More>>
Authors:
Nakagawa, Kunio; Kamezaki, Takao; Shibata, Yasushi; Tsunoda, Takashi; Meguro, Kotoo; Nose, Tadao [1] 
  1. Tsukuba Univ., Ibaraki (Japan). Inst. of Clinical Medicine
Publication Date:
Jan 01, 1995
Product Type:
Journal Article
Reference Number:
SCA: 550603; PA: JPN-95:002410; EDB-95:059989; SN: 95001365080
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Neurologia Medico-Chirurgica; Journal Volume: 35; Journal Issue: 1; Other Information: PBD: Jan 1995
Subject:
55 BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, BASIC STUDIES; LYMPHOKINES; RADIOTHERAPY; BRAIN; PATIENTS; METASTASES; LYMPHOCYTES; ASTROCYTOMAS; RADIATION DOSES; CAT SCANNING
OSTI ID:
25811
Research Organizations:
No corporate text available (Country unknown/Code not available)
Country of Origin:
Japan
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: NMCHBN; ISSN 0387-2572; TRN: JP9502410
Submitting Site:
JPN
Size:
pp. 22-27
Announcement Date:
Apr 14, 1995

Citation Formats

Nakagawa, Kunio, Kamezaki, Takao, Shibata, Yasushi, Tsunoda, Takashi, Meguro, Kotoo, and Nose, Tadao. Effect of lymphokine-activated killer cells with or without radiation therapy against malignant brain tumors. Japan: N. p., 1995. Web.
Nakagawa, Kunio, Kamezaki, Takao, Shibata, Yasushi, Tsunoda, Takashi, Meguro, Kotoo, & Nose, Tadao. Effect of lymphokine-activated killer cells with or without radiation therapy against malignant brain tumors. Japan.
Nakagawa, Kunio, Kamezaki, Takao, Shibata, Yasushi, Tsunoda, Takashi, Meguro, Kotoo, and Nose, Tadao. 1995. "Effect of lymphokine-activated killer cells with or without radiation therapy against malignant brain tumors." Japan.
@misc{etde_25811,
title = {Effect of lymphokine-activated killer cells with or without radiation therapy against malignant brain tumors}
author = {Nakagawa, Kunio, Kamezaki, Takao, Shibata, Yasushi, Tsunoda, Takashi, Meguro, Kotoo, and Nose, Tadao}
abstractNote = {The use of autologous lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells to treat malignant brain tumors was evaluated in 10 patients, one with metastatic malignant melanoma and nine with malignant glioma. LAK cells were obtained by culturing autologous peripheral blood lymphocytes with human recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) for 7-28 days. All patients underwent surgery to remove as much tumor as possible and an Ommaya reservoir was implaced in the tumor cavity. Two of the 10 patients had received radiotherapy elsewhere, so were treated with LAK cells alone. Eight patients were treated with a combination of LAK cells and radiotherapy, using 1.8-2.0 Gy fractions given five times a week with a total dosage between 54 and 65 Gy. LAK cells and rIL-2 were injected to the tumor cavity via the Ommaya reservoir once a week for inpatients and once a month for outpatients. The duration of the LAK therapy ranged from 3 to 23 months (mean 13.7 mos). Neuroimaging evaluation revealed two complete responses, three partial responses, four no changes, and one progressive disease. In one patient with pontine glioma, the Karnofsky performance score was raised from 20 to 60. There were no side effects after the injection of LAK cells and rIL-2. The results suggest low-dose LAK therapy is a useful and safe treatment modality for malignant brain tumors. (author).}
journal = []
issue = {1}
volume = {35}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Japan}
year = {1995}
month = {Jan}
}