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. 1976 Mar;79(3):332-9.

In vitro lymphocyte reactivity and T cell levels in patients with melanoma: correlations with clinical and pathological stage

  • PMID: 1083075

In vitro lymphocyte reactivity and T cell levels in patients with melanoma: correlations with clinical and pathological stage

N A Silverman et al. Surgery. 1976 Mar.

Abstract

In vitro lymphocyte reactivity (LR) to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and peripheral blood thymus-dependent lymphocyte (T cell) levels were determined in 42 tumor-bearing patients with clinically operable melanoma and were compared to 41 age-matched normal controls. Patients with tumors clinically confined to the primary site (Stage I) as a group had normal immune reactivity and T cell levels, and those with regional metastases by clinical assessment (Stage II) had relatively impaired LR and T cell levels. In six of 24 patients with clinical Stage II tumors, widespread metastases (Stage III) subsequently were found. The severe immune defects in this group with occult disseminated melanoma accounted for the impaired LR and low T cell levels in the group with clinical Stage II tumors. Although overlapping levels of LR and T cells in the patients with pathological Stage II and III tumors prevent use of the data as a determinant of tumor extent in individual patients, the results show that these in vitro assays define a relation between cellular immunocompetence and tumor burden in patients with melanoma.

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