PMID: 8603408Apr 1, 1996Paper

Elimination of established liver metastases by human interleukin 2-activated natural killer cells after locoregional or systemic adoptive transfer

Cancer Research
K OkadaTheresa L Whiteside

Abstract

An in vivo model of liver metastasis induced by human gastric carcinoma was established in nude mice and used for locoregional or systemic immunotherapy with a subset of human A-natural killer (NK) cells defined previously. A single intrasplenic (i.s.) delivery of A-NK cells (1 x 10(7)) and interleukin 2 (IL-2; 60,000 international units, twice a day for 5 days, i.p.) to animals with 3-day established liver metastases, but not IL-2 alone, resulted in rapid (within 24 h) elimination of the majority of metastases and significantly improved survival. A single i.s. or i.v. transfer of these effector cells and IL-2 significantly prolonged survival of the mice with 3-day established metastases (P < 0.03 and P < 0.02, respectively) compared with untreated mice. Using 51Cr-labeled A-NK cells, it was determined that, at best, 75% of 1 x 10(7) cells delivered i.s., and up to 50% of those delivered i.v. were found in the liver 30 min-4 h later. Using image analysis with Di-O dye-labeled A-NK cells, 60-100% of A-NK cells delivered i.s. or i.v. were detected in the liver 24 h later. By light microscopy, 3-day liver metastases were mostly intravascular, but some had already begun to spread into liver tissue. When rhodamine- or Di-O dye-label...Continue Reading

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