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Systemic Intravenous Adoptive Transfer of Autologous Lymphokine-activated αβ T-Cells Improves Temozolomide-induced Lymphopenia in Patients with Glioma.

Authors :
Kanemura Y
Sumida M
Okita Y
Yoshioka E
Yamamoto A
Kanematsu D
Handa Y
Fukusumi H
Inazawa Y
Takada AI
Nonaka M
Nakajima S
Mori K
Goto S
Kamigaki T
Shofuda T
Moriuchi S
Yamasaki M
Source :
Anticancer research [Anticancer Res] 2017 Jul; Vol. 37 (7), pp. 3921-3932.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In this clinical study, we investigated the safety and clinical usefulness of systemic adoptive immunotherapy using autologous lymphokine-activated αβ T-cells (αβ T-cells), combined with standard therapies, in patients with malignant brain tumors. Twenty-three patients with different malignant brain tumors, consisting of 14 treated with temozolomide (TMZ group) and 9 treated without temozolomide (non-TMZ group), received systemic intravenous injections of αβ T-cells (mean=10.4 injections/patient for the TMZ group, and 4.78 for the non-TMZ group). No significant adverse effects associated with the αβ T-cell injection were observed, and the total lymphocyte count (TLC) improved significantly in the TMZ group after five injections. Furthermore, CD8-positive or T-cell receptor V gamma -positive cells were increased with TLC in three patients with glioblastoma multiforme. These findings suggest that systemic αβ T-cell immunotherapy is well tolerated, and may help restore an impaired and imbalanced T-cell immune status, and temozolomide- and/or radiotherapy-induced lymphopenia. Future prospective study is needed to clarify the clinical merits of this immunotherapy.<br /> (Copyright© 2017, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1791-7530
Volume :
37
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Anticancer research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28668896
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21873/anticanres.11775