Twelve women and 7 men, median age 58 (range 17-74), with a diagnosis of non-small-cell lung cancer (11 patients), inflammatory breast cancer (5 patients), osteosarcoma (2 patients), and colon carcinoma (1 patient) were studied. Treatment consisted of four consecutive 6-day courses of infusional interleukin-2 (IL2); 9 patients were treated with 20 X 10(6) IU/m2/day and 10 patients received weekly dose increments of 50% until the maximally tolerated dose was reached. One day after each course was completed patients received doxorubicin, 30 mg/m2; infusional IL2 was resumed 24 h after receiving doxorubicin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-five patients with disseminated cancer (nine with renal cell carcinoma, five with melanoma, three with Hodgkin's lymphoma and chronic myelocytic leukemia [CML], two with soft tissue sarcoma, one each with large-cell lymphoma, breast cancer, and colon cancer), 13 males and 12 females, aged 25 to 68, were treated with recombinant human interleukin-2 (rIL2) by continuous infusion and adoptive transfer of autologous lymphocytes activated in vitro with IL2. Patients underwent leukapheresis on days 1, 8, 15, and 22 of the treatment. Cells, bulk activated for 20 hours in serum-free culture medium with 1,000 U IL2/mL in transfusion transfer packs as culture vessels, were transfused the following day.
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