Use of Dimethylmyleran in Adoptive Chemoimmunotherapy of Two Murine Leukemias 2

Abstract
Dimethylmyleran (DMM) is an antitumor agent that has minimal effects on immunity. In a study of its usefulness in adoptive chemoimmunotherapy, C57BL/6 mice inoculated on day 0 with C57BL/6 Friend virus-induced leukemia (FBL-3) were treated on day 5 with 12 mg DMM/kg [<LD10 (lethal dose for 10% of mice)] plus C57BL/6 spleen cells. All untreated mice died, with a median survival time (MST) of 17 days. DMM alone or with nonimmune cells prolonged survival to day 20, and 3/53 mice survived beyond day 60. By contrast, 12/25 mice treated with DMM plus ceUs immune to FBL-3 were cured. Similar results were obtained in C57BL/6 mice with syngeneic Rauscher virus-induced leukemia (RBL-5). Untreated mice died, with an MST of 14 days. DMM alone or with nonimmune cells prolonged the MST to 21 and 26 days, respectively, and 3/26 and 6/28 mice were long-term survivors. However, 13/28 mice were cured by DMM...
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