Abstract

The present prospective study was designed to assess whether the renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients treated with recombinant interferon alpha (IFN alpha), whose tumours respond (responders) and do not respond (non-responders) to IFN alpha therapy, differ with regard to in vitro sensitivity of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) to interleukin 2 (IL-2), IFN alpha, and IFN gamma signals prior to therapy. Twenty-one patients with advanced RCC after nephrectomy, 15 responders and 6 non-responders, were entered into a protocol. The protocol involved isolation and freezing of PBL samples followed by IFN alpha treatment of patients, assessment of proliferative and activating PBL responses, and evaluation of the therapeutic results. Freezing of PBL samples allowed us to compare the in vitro reactivity of PBL from individual RCC patients, repeatedly and under standard conditions. Substantial differences in proliferative responses to the mitogenic IL-2 signal of PBL derived from IFN alpha responders and nonresponders were found. Whereas the IL-2-induced proliferative responses of PBL from normal blood donors and IFN alpha responders were comparable, the proliferative responses of PBL from IFN alpha non-responders were significantly decreased, suggesting an immune dysfunction in non-responders. Cultivation of PBL from RCC patients in medium supplemented with IFN alpha increased the lytic activity of PBL from IFN alpha responders directed against RCC targets; no such increase could be observed with non-RCC targets, with PBL from IFN alpha non-responders, or with PBL from normal blood donors. Detection of phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated IFN gamma secretion by PBL at the single cell level using enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISpot) assay revealed that the ability to produce IFN gamma was substantially decreased in IFN gamma non-reponders, as compared to IFN alpha responders and to normal blood donors.

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