Effect of anti-CD3 antibody on the generation of interleukin-2-activated lymphocytes from tumor tissues of gastrointestinal cancer

1992 
Background. The efficiency of anti-CD3 antibody (OKT3) for adoptive immunotherapy using lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells generated from tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL), regional lymph node lymphocytes (RLNL), and peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) was investigated. Methods. TIL, RLNL, and PBL derived from 39 patients with gastrointestinal cancers (16 gastric cancers, 17 colorectal cancers, and 6 esophageal cancers) were cultured for 4 weeks with 200 U/ml of recombinant interleukin-2. To one group, solid-phase 10 μg/ml OKT3 was added during the initial culture period (day 2 or 4). Cytotoxicity against K562 cells (NK-like activity) and Daudi cells (LAK activity) and the phenotypes of effector cells generated after culturing for 2-3 weeks were studied. Results. Proliferative responses were significantly increased by OKT3 in each type of effector cell (P < 0.01); in particular, TIL expanded more by OKT3 than PBL and RLNL (P < 0.01). The population of CD8+ CD11b- cytotoxic T-cells in OKT3-stimulated groups was significantly larger than that in unstimulated groups (P) < 0.011, whereas no differences were observed with CD4+ cells (helper/inducer T-cells) and CD8+ CD11b+ cells (suppressor T-cells). OKT3 enhanced the NK-like activity of TIL and PBL but did not affect their LAK activity. OKT3 suppressed the NK and LAK activity of RLNL. Conclusions. OKT3 stimulation did not significantly enhance the LAK activity, but the authors propose that OKT3 could be an effective addition to adoptive immunotherapy using TIL due to an increased proliferation and generation of a large cytotoxic T-cell population. Cancer 1992; 70:741–748.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    22
    References
    3
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []