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[Cancer Research 46, 6111-6115, December 1, 1986]
© 1986 American Association for Cancer Research

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Effects of Concomitant and Sinecomitant Immunity on Postsurgical Metastasis in Mice1

Shinhachiro Nomi, Kazuyo Naito, Barry D. Kahan and Neal R. Pellis

Department of Surgery, Division of Immunology and Organ Transplantation, The University of Texas Medical School at Houston, Houston, Texas 77030

The role of concomitant and sinecomitant antitumor resistance in the regulation of metastatic outgrowth was assessed using methylcholanthrene (MCA)-induced tumors in C3H/HeJ mice. Variants of neoplasms MCA-F, MCA-D, and MCA-2A were selected for proclivity for spontaneous lung metastasis and expression of parental tumor-specific transplantation antigens. The incidence of spontaneous lung metastases after resection of a s.c. tumor of clone 9-4, a highly metastatic variant of the MCA-F tumor, was determined by both the size and the duration of neoplastic disease. The coexistence of the primary local tumor retarded lung colonization both from spontaneous and after artificially induced metastases. Greater concomitant immunity leading to a reduced number of artificial metastases after i.v. challenge with clone 9-4 cells was evident in hosts bearing large (1.6 to 1.8 cm) compared to small (0.1 to 0.2 cm) burdens of the nonmetastatic MCA-F (P < 0.005). Furthermore, i.v. challenge of mice bearing antigenically different tumors revealed that the concomitant inhibition was antigen specific with small tumor burdens, but nonspecific and possibly more efficacious with large tumor burdens. Therefore, concomitant antimetastatic immunity consists of both specific, immune-mediated resistance and nonimmunological mechanisms. Specific concomitant immunity decreases inversely with the progression of the primary, while nonimmunological inhibition of metastasis increases during late stages of primary growth. Abrogation of the strong nonspecific concomitant inhibition by resection of the primary tumor may facilitate lung metastasis. On the other hand, significantly greater inhibition of metastases occurred after resection of 7- or 14-day neoplasms compared to larger tumors (P < 0.001 or 0.05). Sinecomitant inhibition is antigen specific, probably representing an extension of specific concomitant immunity. These results suggest that adjunctive immunotherapeutic protocols for surgically treated hosts should augment existent specific immunity and promote nonspecific resistance, in order to minimize metastatic outgrowth.

1 This work is supported by American Cancer Society Grant IM62J and USPHS Grant CA29592.

Received 1/ 2/85. Revised 6/20/86. Revised 9/ 4/86. Accepted 9/ 5/86.




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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 © 1986 by the American Association for Cancer Research.