Immunotherapy with subcutaneous low dose interleukin-2 plus melatonin as salvage therapy of heavily chemotherapy-pretreated ovarian cancer
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- Published online on: September 1, 1996 https://doi.org/10.3892/or.3.5.947
- Pages: 947-949
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Abstract
Preliminary results showed that IL-2 immunotherapy may be effective in the treatment of recurring advanced ovarian cancer. The pineal neurohormone melatonin (MLT) has been proven to amplify IL-2 efficacy by counteracting macrophage-mediated immunosuppression. On this basis, a pilot phase II study of low-dose IL-2 plus MLT was performed in advanced ovarian cancer patients progressing after at least 3 previous polychemotherapeutic lines. The study included 12 evaluable patients. IL-2 was injected subcutaneously at 3 million IU/day for 6 days/week for 4 weeks, by repealing the cycle after a al-day rest period in nonprogressing patients. MLT was given orally at 40 mg/day. No complete response was seen. A partial response was achieved in 2/12 (16%) patients. A stable disease was obtained in 5 other patients, whereas the remaining 5 patients progressed. The treatment was well tolerated. This preliminary study suggests that immunotherapy with low-dose IL-2 plus MLT may represent a well tolerated and promising therapy of advanced ovarian cancer progressing on standard medical treatments.