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Cytokines and tumor vaccination.

Authors :
Anton P
Kirchner H
Jonas U
Atzpodien J
Source :
Cancer biotherapy & radiopharmaceuticals [Cancer Biother Radiopharm] 1996 Oct; Vol. 11 (5), pp. 315-8.
Publication Year :
1996

Abstract

Patients with locally advanced stages of renal cell carcinoma are at high risk of relapse or progress even after initial radical surgery. Based on the proven efficacy of adoptive and active immunotherapeutic approaches of metastatic renal cell carcinoma, a phase II trial was started in 1989 using autologous, Newcastle disease virus modified and lethally irradiated tumor cell vaccines in combination with low-dose recombinant interleukin-2 (1.8 million U) and recombinant interferon-alpha 2a (1.0 million U) for a surgical adjuvant treatment. Patients were vaccinated (subcutaneous injection) once a week for 8-10 weeks and the treatment was started about 4-10 weeks after surgery. Up to now more than 208 patients with locally advanced renal cell carcinoma (stages pT2-3a, N1-2, M0; pT3b-4, N0-2, M0) were vaccinated after initial radical surgery (tumor nephrectomy with lymph node dissection and ipsilateral adrenalectomy and if necessary in combination with en bloc removal of venous extensions). We overview a follow-up of 203 evaluable patients with a median disease-free survival of 21 months (range of 2-64 months). During this observation period 18 relapses (8.9%) were diagnosed with 3 local relapses (1.5%), 10 lymph node metastases (5%) and/or distant organ metastases in 9 cases (4.5%). These progressive patients' disease was treated by surgery and/or combined immunochemotherapy. Toxicity encountered on this tumor cell vaccination was mild (WHO grade 1) and was characterized by flu-like symptoms and fever up to 38.8 degree Celsius for some hours beginning at 4 hours after the vaccine/cytokine application. Occasionally a transient local inflammation at the site of injection was observed. The comparison of the risk-factor-adapted group of adjuvant treated renal cell carcinoma patients (locally advanced stages) with historical data gave evidence for an improvement in disease-free survival on vaccination treatment. Although this was not a prospective randomized trial, we can summarize that the surgical adjuvant treatment of autologous tumor vaccines in combination with low-dose cytokines may improve relapse-free and overall survival in patients with locally advanced renal cell cancer.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1084-9785
Volume :
11
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer biotherapy & radiopharmaceuticals
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
10851511
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/cbr.1996.11.315