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[Cancer Research 30, 1828-1832, June 1, 1970]
© 1970 American Association for Cancer Research

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Cell-mediated Immunity against Malignant Melanoma in Monozygous Twins1

G. A. Nagel, G. St.-Arneault, J. F. Holland, D. Kirkpatrick and R. Kirkpatrick

Department of Medicine A, Roswell Park Memorial Institute, Buffalo, New York 14203 [G. A. N., G. St.-A., J. F. H.], and Meadville City Hospital, Meadville, Pennsylvania 16335 [D. K., R. K.]

We observed congruent contemporaneous concordance of malignant melanoma in identical brothers of a set of triplets. Four and one-half years after surgery, one twin had metastatic disease and the other was apparently free of tumor.

Blastoid transformation of lymphocytes measured by DNA synthesis and cytotoxicity of lymphocytes for melanoma cells measured by fluorescein diacetate loss in mixed lymphocyte-tumor cell cultures were both substantially greater with lymphocytes from the tumor-free twin. Since the brothers were monozygous, this cannot be attributed to transplantation-antigenic differences. Possible explanations include neoantigenization of the tumor and/or depletion or blocking of sensitized lymphocytes from the autochthonous host. The data extend the evidence for immunity against tumors in man and the techniques for demonstrating it.

1 This investigation was supported by USPHS Research Grant CA-5834 from the National Cancer Institute.

Received 11/11/69. Accepted 2/25/70.







HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cancer Research Clinical Cancer Research
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
Cancer Prevention Journals Portal Cancer Reviews Online
Annual Meeting Education Book Meeting Abstracts Online
Copyright © 1970 by the American Association for Cancer Research.