Eight of 28 (28%) cancer patients with liver metastases treated by either splenic (four) or hepatic (four) arterial infusion of recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) developed hypersensitivity reactions to iodine-containing radiographic contrast media. These reactions consisted of fever, chills, malaise, nausea and vomiting, skin rash, diarrhea, and occasionally, hypotension. Reactions usually occurred 1 month after the initial arteriographic procedure and rIL-2 infusion, with 1-hour to 4-hour intervals between procedure and reexposure of the patient to the iodine-containing contrast medium (used in conjunction with computerized tomography or repeated arteriography for subsequent courses of rIL-2 infusions) and the onset of symptoms. Prompt administration of corticosteroids during the reaction and premedication of patients who were known to have had a reaction in the past were very effective in stopping reactions or preventing them from reoccurring. The high incidence (28%) of hypersensitivity reactions, the temporal relationship (4 hours) between the arteriographic procedure (utilizing iodine-containing contrast medium) and the initial infusion of rIL-2 (while some of the contrast medium was still present), and the absence of such hypersensitivity reactions among patients receiving systemic (intravenous) rIL-2 (not requiring the use of concomitant iodine-containing contrast medium) provide additional evidence that in the presence of a potentially immunogenic moiety, rIL-2, a potent stimulant of the human immune system, can produce an initial sensitization followed by subsequent anamnestic reaction upon reexposure of the patient to the immunogen (even without the additional rIL-2).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(19900401)65:7<1521::aid-cncr2820650712>3.0.co;2-y | DOI Listing |
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