Shaw M W, Rubenstein M, Dubin A, McKiel C F, Guinan P D
Division of Urology, Cook County Hospital, Chicago, IL 60612.
Prostate. 1987;11(2):117-25. doi: 10.1002/pros.2990110203.
The Dunning R3327 adenocarcinoma represents a model for studying prostate cancer in rats; early studies have indicated its utility for studying relationships between tumor growth, immunologic markers, and chemotherapy. Normal animals and those bearing the metastatic Dunning R3327 MAT-LyLu tumor were treated with 10, 30, and 100 mg/kg doses of cyclophosphamide (CTX) and their spleens assayed for leukocytic subset distributions using monoclonal antibodies. Tumor-bearing animals had significant reductions in helper T cell content as well as reduced helper/suppressor T cell ratios, compared to controls. These effects occurred rapidly following implantation and were not reversed by chemotherapy. When administered to both tumor- and non-tumor-bearing animals, CTX also depleted T cell populations. Despite reductions produced in all subsets, two administrations of CTX (30 mg/kg) were capable of retaining (in non-tumor-bearing animals) or restoring (in tumor-bearing) normal helper/suppressor T cell ratios. Such studies aid in identifying therapeutically effective dosages of cytotoxic drugs that minimize their deleterious effects on the immune system.