Abstract

Lymphocytes from patients with tumors of the bladder or other unrelated tissues or with non-malignant genitourinary (GU) conditions and from normal subjects were tested in a microcytotoxicity assay against long- and short-term cultures (T24 and BT) derived from bladder carcinoma and several other target cell types, to determine the validity of the hypothesis that cell-mediated cytotoxicity (CMC) in bladder cancer patients is a specific disease-related phenomenon. At the effector cell level, lymphocytes from bladder cancer patients displayed uniformly greater cytotoxicity for T24 and BT cells than those from normal donors. This proclivity was shared by the lymphocytes of patients with non-GU cancers but not of those with non-malignant GU disorders. At the target cell level, CMC was observed less frequently against non-bladder tumor targets than against T24 and BT cells and the CMC of bladder cancer patients did not differ significantly from that of the other groups. The pattern of CMC observed against the bladder tumor-derived targets was thus one of target cell sensitivity rather than tumor-specificity and disease-related only to the extent that the CMC of patients with cancer was greater overall than of healthy subjects. Abrogation of CMC by passage of lymphocytes through immunoglobulin-coated columns indicated that the effector cells were principally of non-T type, bearing a superficial resemblance to those in normal individuals which induce non-disease related CMC.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call