Abstract

The potential of bone marrow transplantation as an immunotherapeutic modality, using biomodulation of the marrow cells has been ignored in autologous transplantation. Furthermore, many common cancers such as lung, colon, prostate, and pancreas are resistant to even transplant doses of conventional agents and hence require novel approaches such as biomodulation. This study shows that we can generate cytotoxic killer cells similar to lymphokine-activated killer cells capable of lysing NK-resistant tumor cells in vitro if we incubate human or murine bone marrow in IL-2. This was accomplished without affecting the ability of the bone marrow to fully reconstitute mice similar to that of fresh nonactivated bone marrow. Studies evaluating the IL-2 activated human bone marrow in vitro also indicated that these activated bone marrow have similar CFU to that of fresh human marrow. Furthermore, in murine in vivo studies, the activated bone marrow (ABM) caused significant tumor regression in tumor-bearing mice. Also, these ABM cells had similar or higher tumoricidal activity and longer kinetics than spleen lymphokine-activated killer cells in vitro. Also, the ABM had purging ability in vitro. Therefore this IL-2 ABM could be used as an active therapeutic tool and not just as a passive rescue element in the autologous bone marrow transplantation setting.

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