Abstract
Objective
To investigate the efficacy of autologous cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cell therapy combined with chemotherapy versus chemotherapy alone for the treatment of stage IV gastrointestinal (GI) cancer in the first-line setting.
Methods
Thirty-three patients diagnosed with stage IV GI cancer were divided into chemotherapy plus CIK group (chemo–CIK, n = 16) and chemotherapy-alone group (chemo-alone, n = 17). Autologous peripheral blood mononuclear cells were separated by flow cytometry, cultured in vitro to induce CIK cells, and transfused into patients on days 14 and 16 of the first and second chemotherapy cycles.
Results
The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 5.6 months for patients in the chemo–CIK group and 3.83 months for those in the chemo-alone group. The difference was borderline significant (P = 0.06), indicating a potential advantage for combined CIK cell transfusion with chemotherapy in improving PFS. A favored objective response rate was also observed in the chemo–CIK group than in the chemo-alone group. This study also revealed that CIK cell transfusion restored the cellular immunity in these GI cancer patients. The percentage of natural killer T cells, NK cells, CD3+ T cells, and T-cell subgroups CD4+ proportion in the peripheral blood of cancer patients significantly increased after the CIK cell transfusion, while the change in T-cell subgroups CD8+ and CD4+/CD8+ did not differ significantly.
Conclusions
The study showed that the addition of CIK cell transfusion to traditional chemotherapy in the first-line setting was associated with a prolonged PFS and enhanced T-lymphocyte subset activity, supporting a potential treatment choice for advanced GI cancer patients.
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