Flavone acetic acid enhances accumulation of IL-2 activated NK cells within established metastases.
1998
: Flavone acetic acid, an agent which has been implicated in both tumor vasculature collapse and NK cell activations, has been tested recently as a potential anti-cancer chemotherapeutic agent. We have tested this agent in combination with adoptive immunotherapy using IL-2 activated natural killer (A-NK) cells in a metastatic B16 melanoma model in C57BL/6 mice. By using rhodamine-labeled A-NK cells we have been able to quantitate both the number of A-NK cells that localize within each tumor section and the percentage of the tumor area occupied by A-NK cells. This has been accomplished using an image analysis system. Flavone acetic acid (200 mg/kg, i.p.) given one day prior to the injection of A-NK cells increased the area of the tumor occupied by A-NK cells and the area of individual A-NK cells approximately 2-fold; however, it did not appear to increase the number of A-NK cells per tumor cross-section. Nevertheless, this increase did not lead to any significant change in the therapeutic efficacy of A-NK cell adoptive immunotherapy. Our studies therefore suggest that mere enhancement of A-NK cell recruitment into tumor metastases does not necessarily translate into enhanced metastatic therapeutic efficacy. Moreover, this method may be a useful tool for pre-screening of compounds which enhance the accumulation of adoptively transferred cells into tumor metastases prior to in vivo screening for therapeutic efficacy.
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