Additive effects of antitumor drugs and lymphokine-activated killer cell cytotoxic activity in tumor cell killing determined by lactate-dehydrogenase-release assay

Abstract
The effect of pretreatment with antitumor drugs on lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell cytotoxic activity, determined by lactate-dehydrogenase(LDH)-release assay, was investigated. LAK cells were induced by incubating peripheral blood lymphocytes of healthy donors in medium containing interleukin-2 (IL-2) and monoclonal anti-CD3 antibody for 6–7 days. A human lung squamous carcinoma cell line, SQ-5, was used as an adherent target. After 24 h exposure of the target cells to cisplatin, doxorubicin, or mitomycin C, the drugs were washed off and LAK cells were added at an E/T ratio of 5. During further incubation for 48 h, LDH release from cisplatin- or doxorubicin-pretreated target cells was markedly higher than that from non-pretreated target cells. The combination of cisplatin and LAK cells has an additive cytotoxic effect and that of mitomycin C and LAK cells does not; there may also be an additive effect late in the toxicity mechanism between doxorubicin and LAK cells.

This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit: