Abstract

We administered serum fractions obtained from cancer patients by double-filtration plasmapheresis (DFPP) to cancer-bearing mice to examine the effects on tumor growth and metastasis. Fraction 1 (whole plasma), fraction 2 (a plasma fraction containing substances with higher particle size), fraction 3 (a plasma fraction containing substances with smaller particle size) and saline were administered intravenously to cancer-bearing mice for 10 days following the inoculation of tumor cells. The tumor growth and metastasis in mice administered fraction 2 was far more rapid than that in the control mice. On the other hand, tumor growth in mice administered fraction 3 was significantly delayed compared with that in mice injected with fraction 2. These results suggest that factors in the higher particle-size fraction of cancer patients' sera promote the growth and the metastasis of tumors in mice, and that DFPP, which remove these factors, is an effective therapy against cancer.

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