ISSN:
1432-0851
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Medicine
Notes:
Summary A 44-hour incubation microcytotoxicity assay (MA) was used to titrate the lymphocyte-mediated cytotoxicity in 47 transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) bladder cancer patients and 65 clinical control patients. All titrations included three target cell lines: HU 456 (TCC), HU 609 (normal urothelium), and SAOS 2 (osteosarcoma). Tumor-specific cytotoxicity (TSC) was calculated as the difference between cytotoxicity to HU 456 and HU 609, and tumor type-specific cytotoxicity (TTSC) as the difference between cytotoxicity to HU 456 and SAOS 2. On the basis of TSC and TTSC values obtained before treatment TCC patients were divided into one group with high-grade specific cytotoxicity (HSC) and another with low-grade specific cytotoxicity (LSC). A prospective follow-up study of these patients revealed a significantly lower survival rate for patients with LSC compared with patients with HSC, even when the groups were corrected for differences in distributions according to clinical and histological tumor gradation. This indicates a growth-controlling function of the cellular immune reaction. Repeated cytotoxicity tests in a follow-up study of 26 TCC patients and one patient with a squamous cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder revealed a positive correlation between positive specific cytotoxicity and the presence of tumor tissue Gr 2–4. The reactivity vanished within 1 month after surgical removal of the tumor or at the end of radiotherapy. An increased cytotoxicity against HU 609, representing normal urothelium, was seen immediately following radiotherapy, and in a few cases after surgical treatment. Reapearance of elevated TSC and TTSC was noted during the months following radiotherapy. When the MA was considered as a diagnostic marker of tumor tissue during clinical control of patients with suspected TCC, 22% of positive reactions proved to be false-positive and 44% of negative reactions were false-negative. Thus, a negative result cannot be used to exclude recurrence, but a positive result may indicate the need for additional clinical examinations.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00205517
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