Immune restoration in head and neck cancer patients after in vivo COX-2 inhibition.

  • Stephan Lang
  • Sanjay Tiwari
  • Michaela Andratschke
  • Iren Loehr
  • Lina Lauffer
  • Christoph Bergmann
  • Brigitte Mack
  • Annette Lebeau
  • Andreas Moosmann
  • Theresa L Whiteside
  • Reinhard Zeidler

Related Research units

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine the immunomodulatory effects of in vivo COX-2 inhibition on leukocyte infiltration and function in patients with head and neck cancer. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck preoperatively received a specific COX-2 inhibitor (rofecoxib, 25 mg daily) orally for 3 weeks. Serum and tumor specimens were collected at the start of COX-2 inhibition (day 0) and again on the day of surgery (day 21). Adhesion to peripheral blood monocytes to ICAM-1 was examined. Percentages of tumor-infiltrating monocytes (CD68, CCR5) and lymphocytes (CCR5, CD4, CD8 and CD25) were determined by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: Monocytes obtained from untreated cancer patients showed lower binding to ICAM-1 compared to monocytes of healthy donors but significantly regained adhesion affinity following incubation in sera of healthy donors. Conversely, sera of cancer patients inhibited adhesion of healthy donors' monocytes. Tumor monocyte adhesion to ICAM-1 was increased (P

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number10
ISSN0340-7004
Publication statusPublished - 2007
pubmed 17387473