H. Inagawa et al., AUGMENTATION OF ANTITUMOR EFFECT OF ENDOGENOUSLY INDUCED TUMOR-NECROSIS-FACTOR BY CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE, Anticancer research, 17(1A), 1997, pp. 55-60
The antitumor effect of endogenous tumor necrosis factor (en-TNF) with
cyclophosphamide (CY) was analysed using the murine Meth A tumor mode
l. En-TNF was induced by the administration of interferon-gamma (4 mu
g/kg: 1x10(4) units/mouse) as a primer and Streptococcus preparation O
K-432 (100 KE/kg) as a trigger. Seven days after inoculation of Meth A
tumor in BALB/c mice, about one third of LD(50) of CY of five other c
hemotherapeutic agents (actinomycin D, mitomycin C, tegaful, adriamyci
n and puromycin) was injected intravenously. En-TNF was induced 7 days
after administration of these agents. A combination therapy of en-TNF
with CY showed the strongest antitumor effect among several combinati
ons and caused complete tumor regression (40-70%), while none of the c
ombinations with the other chemotherapeutics did so. The optimal time
interval to obtain this antitumor effect with CY and en-TNF induction
was 7 days. The amount of en-TNF induced around a tumor lesion with CY
was two fold higher than that without CY. En-TNF was observed to be i
nduced in tumor lesion solely by CY injection. All these results sugge
st that the antitumor effect of en-TNF can be augmented by addition of
a chemotherapeutic agent such as CY.