Combination Therapy of Intravenously Injected Microglia and Radiation Therapy Prolongs Survival in a Rat Model of Spontaneous Malignant Glioma.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to investigate the efficacy of combination therapy with intravenously injected microglia (MI) and radiation therapy (RT) for malignant glioma in rats. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Transgenic rats expressing v-erbB and spontaneously developing malignant glioma were used. The rats were divided into 4 groups: control (n = 19), RT alone (n = 10), MI alone (n = 9), and combination MI and RT (MI + RT) (n = 10). Cranial x-ray irradiation (8 Gy per fraction; once per week) was performed at 50 and 51 weeks of age. Cultured rat microglial cells (5 × 106 cells/rat) were intravenously injected via the tail vein within 30 minutes after RT. RESULTS: No evidence of side effects, including thrombosis or graft-versus-host disease, was noted. Rats treated with RT alone, MI alone, MI + RT, and control survived 60.9, 56.3, 66.0, and 56.1 weeks, respectively. The survival period of MI + RT was significantly longer than that of control (P = .014), MI alone (P = .027), and RT alone (P = .049). Immunohistochemical analysis showed a significantly higher number of tumor-infiltrated MI in the RT alone (P = .041) and MI + RT groups (P = .014) compared with the control. Significantly more CD8-positive lymphocytes were observed in the MI + RT group (P = .049) compared with the control. A positive correlation was found between the number of MI and CD8-positive lymphocytes (R2 = 0.556). A positive correlation was also found between CD8-positive lymphocytes and survival periods (R2 = 0.460). CONCLUSIONS: MI + RT increased infiltrated MI and CD8-positive T cells and prolonged survival in transgenic rats that spontaneously developed malignant glioma. Combined immunocellular therapy and RT may provide a novel treatment strategy for malignant glioma.