To our knowledge, the current report was the first to analyze circulating levels of angiogenic factors during dendritic cell-based immunotherapy. The authors observed a noteworthy change in the angiogenic blood profile with treatment, and this change was correlated with the induction of an immunologic response.
Dendritic cells (DCs) have attracted wide interest because of their unique capacity to elicit primary and secondary antitumor responses. We have generated autologous tumor lysate-pulsed DCs from three patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) and tested them for their ability to stimulate cytotoxic T-cell responses against autologous MTC tumor cells in vitro. The aim of our investigations was to evaluate the potential efficacy of DC-based immunotherapy in patients with MTC. DCs were generated from peripheral blood monocytes using GM-CSF and IL-4 (immature DCs) or GM-CSF, IL-4, and TNFalpha (mature DCs). Our results indicate that mature tumor lysate-pulsed DCs are able to elicit a human leukocyte antigen class I-restricted cytotoxic T-cell response against autologous MTC tumor cells, whereas immature tumor lysate-pulsed DCs do not stimulate significant antitumor activity. We feel that our data may be relevant for future clinical trials of active immunotherapy using tumor lysate-pulsed DCs in patients with MTC who have residual or distant disease after surgical treatment. The fact that mature DCs displayed a substantially higher capacity to stimulate autologous antitumor T-cell responses than immature DCs underlines the importance of a maturation step in immunotherapy protocols based on DCs.
Acute appendicitis is a rare gastrointestinal complication of anti-cancer chemotherapy and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Among a cohort of 2341 hemato-oncologic patients at a pediatric tertiary care cancer center, we identified 21 patients (0.9%) with 23 episodes of acute appendicitis, based on pathological imaging of the appendix and clinical findings. Median age at diagnosis was 10.21 years. Types of underlying disease included acute leukemias (n = 15), solid tumors (n = 4), and aplastic anemia (n = 2). Clinical symptoms seen in > 1 case were recorded for all 23 episodes as follows: abdominal pain, n = 22; abdominal tenderness, n = 4; fever, n = 7; nausea, n = 2; emesis; n = 2; diarrhea, n = 5; and constipation, n = 2. Median leukocyte count at diagnosis was 0.5 × 109/L, with a median of 0.1 × 109/L for the absolute neutrophil count (ANC). All patients received broad-spectrum antibiotics and 18/23 (78%) patients underwent uneventful appendectomy after a median of 5 days and with a median ANC of 0.7 × 109/L. Median duration until continuation of chemotherapy was 17 days for the 20 cases of appendicitis occurring during the patients’ disease course. Overall, 5/21 (19%) patients died including one related to the appendicitis itself which progressed to a typhlitis and was due to a fungal infection. The other fatalities were transplant- (n = 2) and leukemia-related (n = 2). Acute appendicitis is a rare and usually not life-threatening event in pediatric hemato-oncologic patients, which, if managed by prompt administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics (and antimycotics), can be safely followed by an elective (delayed) appendectomy, even before complete recovery of the neutrophils is achieved.
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