Phase I trial of recombinant interleukin-2 and cyclophosphamide: augmentation of cellular immunity and T-cell mitogenic response with long-term administration of rIL-2. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Long-term subcutaneous (s.c.) administration of recombinant Interleukin-2 (rIL-2) was evaluated in 18 patients with advanced malignancy who received escalating doses of rIL-2 (1.0-9.8 X 10(6) U/m2) s.c. five times per week for a median of 38 days (range 5-228 days). Prior to the s.c. phase of the study, 24 patients received low doses (50 or 350 mg/m2) of cyclophosphamide (CPM) i.v. on day 1 followed by 10 doses (days 5-9 and 12-16) of rIL-2 (1 X 10(6) U/m2) given by 6 h i.v. infusion. There were no major antitumor effects. Toxicity was not clearly dose-related, with pain and induration at s.c. injection sites, fatigue, malaise, and palpitations most often observed. Pretreatment baseline ranges (PBR), which are 95% prediction intervals that reflect both intra- and interpatient variability, were calculated for nine hematologic and immunologic variables derived from 21 of the 24 patients. While pretreatment with CPM had no significant effect on these variables during the i.v. phase of the study as compared to a prior study using an identical rIL-2 i.v. infusion schedule, prolonged administration of s.c. rIL-2 was associated with (a) enhancement of natural killer (NK) cytotoxicity against K562 in 13 of 21 patients (p less than 0.00001), (b) increases in cytotoxicity against K562 (15 patients) and against Daudi (9 patients) in the presence of 10 U/ml of rIL-2 (p = 0.007), (c) increases in the proliferative response in vitro to OKT3 and rIL-2 in 12 patients (p less than 0.00001), (d) lymphocytosis with increase in percentage of Tac (13 patients, p less than 0.00001), T8 (11 patients, p = 0.0005), and T9 (8 patients, p = 0.021) expression, and (e) eosinophilia. While initial rises in some of these variables occurred during the i.v. phase of the study, maximum increases for all variables except T9 positivity occurred during prolonged s.c. therapy. Nine of 10 patients studied while on therapy greater than 50 days had anti-rIL-2 antibodies in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; in only one case was the antibody neutralizing. This study demonstrates that significant enhancement of cytotoxicity against both NK-sensitive and -resistant targets and improvements in T-cell mitogenic response occur with long-term administration of rIL-2. Further evaluation of long-term administration of tolerable doses of rIL-2 is warranted.

authors

  • Oettgen, Herbert
  • Kolitz, J E
  • Wong, G Y
  • Welte, Karl
  • Merluzzi, V J
  • Engert, Adelheid
  • Bialas, Tammo
  • Polivka, Andrej
  • Bradley, E C
  • Konrad, Michael
  • Gnecco, Clare

publication date

  • October 1, 1988

Research

keywords

  • Cyclophosphamide
  • Interleukin-2
  • Mitogens

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0023711717

PubMed ID

  • 3263471

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 7

issue

  • 5