Abstract
We examined the in vitro sensitivity of continuous ovarian cancer cells to lymphokine-activated killer T cells (T-LAK) alone or in combination with cytokines. Lymphocyte viability in T-LAK cultures generated from normal donors and ovarian cancer patients declined in the first 2 to 4 days; however, the remaining cells in these cultures maintained a constant rate of proliferation for long periods in vitro. These cells became 90–95% CD3 + TCR + −α β T-cells after 7–10 days in culture. The T-LAK cells from normal donors and cancer patients expressed an equal ability to induce lysis of a panel of human target cells (NK-sensitive K562, NK-insensitive RAJI, and two human ovarian tumor lines, SKOV-3 and OVCAR-3), demonstrating that they are nongenetically restricted killers. Preincubation of either the effector or target cells with tumor necrosis factor or interferon-γ or addition of these cytokines directly to cytolytic assays did not alter the degree of cell lysis in vitro. This is a method for generating large numbers of autologous, cytolytically active T-LAK cells from the blood of ovarian cancer patients that could be employed in adoptive intraperitoneal immunotherapy.
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