Publication | Open Access
Intratumoral injection of an adenovirus expressing interleukin 2 induces regression and immunity in a murine breast cancer model.
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Citations
37
References
1995
Year
Breast OncologyHuman Il-2ImmunologyImmunoeditingPathologyImmunotherapyTumor BiologyCancer-associated VirusInduces RegressionAdenovirus VectorTumor ImmunityRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchIntratumoral InjectionTumor MicroenvironmentCancer ImmunosurveillanceInterleukin 2Breast CancerMedicineViral OncologyHuman Il-2 Gene
Rodent tumor cells engineered to secrete cytokines such as interleukin 2 (IL-2) or IL-4 are rejected by syngeneic recipients due to an enhanced antitumor host immune response. An adenovirus vector (AdCAIL-2) containing the human IL-2 gene has been constructed and shown to direct secretion of high levels of human IL-2 in infected tumor cells. AdCAIL-2 induces regression of tumors in a transgenic mouse model of mammary adenocarcinoma following intratumoral injection. Elimination of existing tumors in this way results in immunity against a second challenge with tumor cells. These findings suggest that adenovirus vectors expressing cytokines may form the basis for highly effective immunotherapies of human cancers.
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