Abstract

Sixty-eight patients with various malignancy was examined for their natural killer (NK) cell activity against 14 target cell lines. The group consisted of 10 patients with gastric cancer, 10 patients with lung cancer, 8 patients with hepatoma, 11 patients with cancer of female genital organs, 14 patients with malignant lymphoma and 15 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). The target cells from a variety of lineage were selected to examine the disease-related specificity in NK cell activity. The peripheral mononuclear cells from patients with gastric cancer did not show a decrease in NK activity against 14 targets including gastric cancer cell lines. Other patients except for AML demonstrated low NK activity against one or two target cells out of 14 targets. Whereas, NK activity in patients with AML was remarkably depressed against 10 target cells out of 14. At single cell assay, killing ability rather than binding activity to target was markedly impaired in AML. Comprehensively, the data demonstrated the marked difference in the NK level between the patients with solid tumor and the patients with hematopoietic malignancy. There existed neither disease-related specificity in NK cytolysis, nor correlation in NK levels and clinical severity in the patients with malignancy. These results suggested that it was very difficult to evaluate the anti-cancer capacity in patients with malignancy by NK activity alone.

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