Experiments were designed to investigate the therapeutic efficacy of interleukin-2 (IL-2) combined with radiotherapy. The effect of IL-2 and local thoracic irradiation (LTI) was determined on 4-day-old lung micrometastases, generated by i.v. injection of tumor cells into mice. IL-2 alone reduced the number of lung nodules more effectively when given from 1 to 4 than 4 to 7 days after tumor cell injection. The combination of IL-2 and LTI reduced the number of lung nodules more than did the individual treatments alone. When IL-2 therapy was combined with local irradiation of 8-mm leg tumors, there was no change in the TCD50 (radiation dose yielding 50% local tumor control). However, the combination of IL-2 treatment on days 1-4 with irradiation of tumor-bearing legs on day 1 after inoculation of tumor cells reduced the TCD50 by a factor of 1.3. These results show that IL-2 improves tumor radiotherapy, but that the improvement depends on anatomic localization and tumor size at the time of treatment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00133472 | DOI Listing |
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