N. Zarkovic et al., THE VISCUM-ALBUM PREPARATION ISOREL INHIBITS THE GROWTH OF MELANOMA B16F10 BY INFLUENCING THE TUMOR-HOST RELATIONSHIP, Anti-cancer drugs, 8, 1997, pp. 17-22
The aim of this study was to analyse whether Viscum album (mistletoe;
Isorel) modulates the tumour-host relationship and whether this might
be a basic mechanism of the antitumorous activity of the drug, The eff
ects of a single intraperitoneal injection of the drug (100 mg/kg sing
le 'planta tota' dose) were analysed for mice-bearing melanoma B16F10
growing in the hind limb. Injection of Isore/reduced the size of the t
umour and caused abundant tumour necrosis with inflammatory response,
oedema and destruction of the malignant tissue, Furthermore, the lymph
ocytes of saline-treated tumorous mice were not able to respond to the
mitogenic lectin concanavalin A in vitro, while those of mistletoe ex
tract-treated mice showed high reactivity to the mitogen, but only if
cultured in the medium supplemented with the plasma of the mistletoe e
xtract-treated mice, Moreover, melanoma cells exposed to the mistletoe
extract were more sensitive to the cytotoxic activity of the lymphocy
tes than the control tumour cells, particularly in the presence of the
plasma of mistletoe extract-treated mice, The plasma itself, however,
did not show any cytotoxic activity. These results indicate that the
antitumour activity of the mistletoe drug is due to a modulation of th
e tumour-host relationship, mediated by direct cytotoxicity of the dru
g to tumour cells and/or through a potentiation of immune response by
certain, as yet unidentified, growth modifying humoral factors of the
host.