• 1 January 1977
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 37  (12) , 4580-4583
Abstract
The administration of methotrexate (1 mg/kg), leucovorin (1 mg/kg), and (after a 1 h interval) 5-fluorouracil (50 mg/kg) selectively suppresses antibody production in C3H mice without inhibiting, but even stimulating, cell-mediated immunity. The effect of this regimen, given at weekly intervals, was tested on the growth of recently arising syngeneic C3H/HeJ mammary tumors. Inhibition of growth was found in 3 types of experiments: when treatment was begun 2 days after tumor implantation, when it was begun 3 wk after implantation and when it was begun after surgical enucleation of the tumor. The extent of the effect varied from tumor to tumor, but in all cases tumor incidence or growth was significantly inhibited. Comparison was made between the above regimen and 2 other sequences of administration of the same drugs, which are only weakly immunosuppressive of antibody production and which do not stimulate cell-mediated immunity. Survival of tumor-bearing mice was greater with the administration of methotrexate, then leucovorin, followed by 5-fluorouracil, than it was with the other 2 administration schedules.