A 40 year old woman with Hodgkin's disease twice developed signs of encephalitis while being treated with prednisone and cyclophosphamide for 10 months. Since on both occasions her Toxoplasma dye test titer was 1 : 8000 or higher, she was treated on suspicion of toxoplasmosis with sulfadizine and pyrimethamine. Her tumor therapy was changed to bleomycin with lower doses of prednisone for 12 months. After death from central pontine myelinolysis, Toxoplasma and cytomegalovirus could be isolated, but no lesions attributable to these infectious agents were present. Maintenance of the patient's immune competence suggested an inquiry into the effects of the chemotherapeutic agents and of tumor infiltration for their respective interference with immunity. Using hamsters with chronic latent toxoplasmosis, it was found that both cortisone and cyclophosphamide caused recrudescence of chronic inapparent infection, that vinblastine and bleomycin interfered only slightly with the development of immunity, whereas in infiltrating lymphoma permitted immunity to develop normally. It is concluded that greater attention should be directed to the immunosuppressive effects of tumor treatment. By choice of an effective tumor therapy which is least immunosuppressive, and if necessary under cover of antimicrobial therapy, a patient with Hodgkin's disease can be aided in developing immunities which he may subsequently be able to maintain.
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