Publication | Closed Access
<i>in vivo</i> effects of combination treatment with recombinant interferon‐gamma and ‐alpha in metastatic melanoma
30
Citations
33
References
1989
Year
The toxicity and therapeutic efficacy of the combination of recombinant interferon gamma (rIFN-gamma) and alpha (rIFN-alpha) was investigated in 15 patients with metastatic melanoma. Patients were treated with an escalating dose of rIFN-gamma and a fixed dose of rIFN-alpha administered s.c. 3 times a week. The maximum dose was well tolerated. The median survival time of the patients was 7 months; no clinical remissions were observed. In the majority of cases, expression of HLA class-I and -II antigens on the patients' peripheral blood lymphocytes and monocytes increased markedly during treatment. An increase in HLA-DR expression of peripheral blood T lymphocytes was correlated with a longer survival time. This suggests that activation of T lymphocytes may have a favourable influence on the course of metastatic disease. The in vitro anti-proliferative activity of IFNs on melanoma cell lines isolated from melanoma metastases during treatment of 3 patients was determined. In contrast to the lack of in vivo anti-tumour effect in patients, both rIFN-gamma and rIFN-alpha inhibited DNA synthesis of these melanoma cell lines in vitro, combined IFNs acting synergistically. Anti-proliferative activity observed in vitro occurred at IFN concentrations below the peak serum levels achieved in vivo.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1