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Harly endothelium activation and polymorphonuclear cell invasion precede specific necrosis of human melanoma and sarcoma treated by intravascular high‐dose tumour necrosis factor alpha (rTNFα)
143
Citations
14
References
1994
Year
Twenty-seven patients treated with high-dose rTNF alpha, IFN gamma and melphalan by isolated limb perfusion were histologically documented. There were 20 cases of melanoma-in-transit metastases and 7 cases of high-grade soft-tissue sarcoma. Biopsies were taken before IFN gamma, after IFN gamma, before TNF alpha and between 2 hr and 60 days after the TNF alpha perfusion. Immunohistochemistry was performed for adhesion molecules ICAM-I, ELAM-I (E selectin), VCAM-I and PECAM. During the first hours after beginning perfusion, the endothelial cells of the tumour capillaries appeared swollen. Significant tumour necrosis was already observed 3 hours after the perfusion in melanoma cases. The overall predominant feature was coagulative necrosis associated or not with haemorrhagic necrosis. TNF alpha induced increased expression of ELAM-I and VCAM-I adhesion molecules on intratumoral endothelial cells. The activated tumour vessels were progressively destroyed. Significant intravascular recruitment of polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs) was observed 3 hr after starting TNF alpha; it was followed by diapedesis and tumour colonization 3 days later. T lymphocytes and macrophages were detected during the first 7 days and B lymphocytes during the second week. Melanoma in transit metastases treated with alkylating agent alone did not show significant necrosis and did not express high levels of adhesion molecules (ELAM-I, VCAM-I) nor infiltration by PMN.
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