肿瘤过继免疫治疗中效应细胞的组织分布和肿瘤定位。

APMIS. Supplementum Pub Date : 1995-01-01
P H Basse
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在癌症的过继免疫治疗(AIT)中,淋巴细胞从患者血液中分离出来,并在体外被细胞因子白介素-2 (IL-2)激活。在IL-2的作用下,淋巴细胞大量增殖,其细胞毒性潜能增加数倍。培养5-10天后,这些细胞——现在被称为淋巴因子激活杀手(LAK)细胞——与IL-2一起被注射回患者体内。临床前动物模型的许多积极结果证明了AIT快速进入临床,但临床结果远未达到预期。许多癌症中心得出结论,考虑到平均反应率低至20-30%,目前的AIT配置不具有成本效益。由于一组重要的患者在AIT后表现出完全的反应,挑战在于阐明导致AIT最佳疗效的条件。人们普遍认为LAK细胞的抗肿瘤作用需要LAK细胞与肿瘤细胞的密切接触。在AIT背后的机制分析的一个中心问题是LAK细胞定位到恶性组织的能力。对51Cr-和111in标记LAK细胞组织分布的早期研究表明,静脉注射LAK细胞最初保留在肺部,但在随后的16-24小时内重新分布到肝脏和脾脏。然而,我们对静脉注射肿瘤细胞的运输和命运的研究表明,使用51Cr和111In作为细胞标记往往会导致对细胞向肝脏和脾脏的运输的高估,并导致对注射细胞存活的错误高预测,这是由于51Cr和111In从死细胞释放后在肝脏和脾脏中非特异性积累。125IUdR从死细胞释放后不会在肝脏和脾脏中积累,使用125IUdR表明LAK细胞进入这些器官的流量比以前认为的要低得多。现在使用其他细胞标记(如荧光染料和免疫组织化学)重复了这些实验,并证实只有少数LAK细胞从肺部重新分布到肝脏和脾脏,并且大多数在注射后的最初24小时内死亡。因此,LAK细胞的循环电位非常低,静脉注射LAK细胞能够定位到肿瘤和转移到肺以外的其他器官的可能性似乎很小。事实上,虽然荧光标记的LAK细胞在静脉注射后选择性地定位到肺转移灶,但未见肺外转移灶浸润。此外,定量分析表明,尽管LAK细胞在肺转移灶中的定位具有高度特异性(在转移灶中发现的LAK细胞数量通常是周围正常肺组织的5-10倍),但只有5%的注射细胞到达恶性组织。因此,我们有理由认为,如果可以延长LAK细胞在体内的存活时间,并增强LAK细胞浸润肿瘤的能力,无论其位置如何,AIT的疗效都可以得到提高。先前对小鼠模型的研究表明,静脉注射的肿瘤细胞被隔离在肺部,只有少数到达其他器官。然而,当将肿瘤细胞注入心脏左心室(绕过肺毛细血管)时,在肝脏中发现了大量肿瘤细胞。因此,我们似乎有理由推测,将LAK细胞注射到心脏左心室或直接注射到供应肿瘤器官的动脉中,将有更好的机会定位到恶性组织。这似乎是正确的,因为门内注射后肝脏中LAK细胞的数量比静脉注射高10倍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tissue distribution and tumor localization of effector cells in adoptive immunotherapy of cancer.

In adoptive immunotherapy (AIT) of cancer, lymphocytes are isolated from the patient's blood and activated in vitro by the cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2). In response to the IL-2 the lymphocytes proliferate vigorously and their cytotoxic potential increases several fold. After 5-10 days in culture, the cells-now called lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells-are injected back into the patient together with IL-2. The many positive results from preclinical animal models justified the rapid transit of AIT into the clinic, but the clinical results have far from fulfilled expectations. Many cancer centers have concluded that AIT in its present configuration is not cost-effective given that the average response rate is as low as 20-30%. Since a significant group of patients has shown complete responses after AIT, the challenge is to elucidate the conditions leading to optimal efficacy of AIT. It is generally accepted that the antineoplastic effect of LAK cells requires a close contact between the LAK cells and tumor cells. A central question in analyses of the mechanisms behind AIT is the ability of the LAK cells to localize to the malignant tissues. The earliest studies of the tissue distribution of 51Cr- and 111In-labeled LAK cells indicated that LAK cells, upon intravenous (i.v.) injection, are initially retained in the lungs, but redistribute to liver and spleen during the following 16-24 hours. However, our studies of the traffic and fate of i.v. injected tumor cells have shown that the use of 51Cr and 111In as cell labels often results in an over-estimation of the traffic of cells to liver and spleen and leads to falsely high predictions as to the survival of the injected cells, due to non-specific accumulation of 51Cr and 111In in liver and spleen after their release from dead cells. Use of 125IUdR, which does not accumulate in liver and spleen following release from dead cells, shows that the traffic of LAK cells into these organs was much lower than previously thought. These experiments have now been repeated using other cell labels (such as fluorescence dyes and immunohistochemistry) and they confirm that only few LAK cells redistribute from the lungs to the liver and spleen and that most die within the first 24 hours following injection. Thus, the circulatory potential of LAK cells is very low and chances that i.v. injected LAK cells will be able to localize into tumors and metastases located in other organs than the lungs, seems small. Indeed, while fluorescence-labeled LAK cells selectively localize into pulmonary metastases following intravenous injection, no infiltration of extrapulmonary metastases is seen. Furthermore, quantitative analyses have shown that even though the localization of LAK cells into pulmonary metastases is highly specific (5-10 fold higher numbers of LAK cells are often found in the metastases compared to the surrounding normal lung tissue), only 5% of the injected cells reach the malignant tissues. It is therefore reasonable to assume that the efficacy of AIT can be improved if the in vivo survival of the LAK cells can be prolonged and if their ability to infiltrate tumors regardless of their location, can be augmented. Previous studies in murine models have shown that i.v. injected tumor cells are sequestrated in the lungs and that only few of them reach other organs. However, when the tumor cells were injected into the left ventricle of the heart (bypassing the lung capillaries), significant numbers of tumor cells were found in the liver. It therefore seemed reasonable to speculate that LAK cells injected into the left ventricle of the heart or directly into the arteries supplying the tumor-bearing organ would have better chances of localizing to the malignant tissue. This seemed to be correct in that 10 fold higher numbers of LAK cells were found in the liver following intraportal injection compared to intravenous injection.

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