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. 1982 Feb;42(2):496-501.

Involvement of macrophages in the eradication of established metastases following intravenous injection of liposomes containing macrophage activators

  • PMID: 7055801

Involvement of macrophages in the eradication of established metastases following intravenous injection of liposomes containing macrophage activators

I J Fidler et al. Cancer Res. 1982 Feb.

Abstract

Liposomes containing encapsulated lymphokines or muramyl dipeptide (MDP), when injected i.v. into C57BL/6 mice, produced significant destruction of established lung and lymph node metastases from a s.c. highly metastatic B16-BL6 melanoma. We present evidence that eradication of the metastases is mediated by the activation of host macrophages to the tumoricidal state. Results from three separate types of experiments support this conclusion. (a) When macrophage-activating agents such as lymphokines of MDP were delivered in liposomes that were not efficiently retained in the lung, little or no activation of lung macrophages was observed, and growth of metastases was unaltered. (b) Eradication of metastases was not observed when tumor-bearing animals were treated with agents that impaired macrophage function (e.g., silica, carrageenan, hyperchlorinated drinking water) prior to systemic therapy with liposome-encapsulated lymphokines or liposome-encapsulated MDP. (c) Macrophages activated in vitro by liposome-encapsulated MDP and then injected i.v. into mice bearing experimental lung metastases also significantly inhibited lung metastases. These results suggest that the augmented host response against pulmonary and lymph node metastases generated by the systemic administration of liposome-encapsulated lymphokines or MDP is mediated via activated cytotoxic macrophages.

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