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Clinical Cancer Research, Vol 2, Issue 9 1453-1460, Copyright © 1996 by American Association for Cancer Research
ARTICLES |
HD Preisler, VM Kotelnikov, S LaFollette, S Taylor 4th, S Mundle, N Wood, JS Coon 4th, J Hutchinson, W Panje, DD Caldarelli and K Griem
Rush Cancer Institute, Department of Pathology, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois 60612-3833, USA.
The effect of cytotoxic therapy on the proliferation of squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck in vivo in patients was evaluated before and 15-35 days after the start of therapy. To accomplish this, iododeoxyuridine was administered at t = 0, and bromodeoxyuridine was administered 15-35 days later during treatment with a tumor biopsy obtained for study immediately after each pyrimidine infusion. Monoclonal antibodies specific for the halogenated pyrimidines were used to identify cells that were in the S-phase at the time of the infusions. Eleven patients were studied prior to treatment. Of those, the intratreatment biopsy of eight patients contained tumor tissue. In the other three patients, tumor tissue was not present in the second biopsy. Continued precursor incorporation into DNA-synthesizing cells during treatment was detected in six of eight tumor specimens. In two tumor specimens, an increase in the percentage of S-phase cells was noted, in two specimens tumor cells synthesizing DNA were not detected, and in four specimens the percentage of S-phase tumor cells was lower than that in the pretherapy specimen. Patients in whom there were no S-phase cells detected during treatment or in whom no tumor was detected in the second biopsy had a favorable treatment outcome in comparison to those patients in whom continued tumor proliferation during treatment was detected. The number of cells in S-phase prior to the initiation of treatment was not predictive of whether or not proliferation would continue during cytotoxic therapy. Evidence for reentry of kinetically quiescent cells into the cycle during treatment was noted. Additionally, cytotoxic therapy altered the proliferation pattern of normal-appearing mucosa as well. The results of this study demonstrate that tumor cell proliferation does continue in some squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck during intensive cytotoxic therapy.
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