Baker D, Elkon D, Lim M L, Constable W, Rinehart L, Wanebo H
Cancer. 1982 Feb 1;49(3):427-33. doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(19820201)49:3<427::aid-cncr2820490306>3.0.co;2-6.
KHT sarcomas were implanted in the right rear legs of C3H mice. An x-ray dose of 6000 rad, delivered in ten equal fractions over 12 days, resulted in 60% local tumor control, but 83% of these mice developed metastases. Three strategies to use the tumoricidal effect of x-radiation and reduce the incidence of metastases were compared. A modification of the fractionation scheme to deliver an initial large fraction of 1800 rad followed by seven 600-rad fractions resulted in a decreased incidence of metastases compared with the same dose delivered in ten equal fractions. The use of warfarin anticoagulation during the ten-fraction course of radiation resulted in a small decrease in the incidence of metastases. Immune stimulation with levamisole, injected subcutaneously every second day during the irradiation, also resulted in a decrease in the incidence of metastases. However, when warfarin or levamisole were combined with the eight-fraction radiation scheme there were fewer metastases than following the ten-fraction scheme. The combination of the eight-fraction radiation course with levamisole also produced a significant increase in primary tumor control. In this treatment regimen, therefore, levamisole appears to act as a radiation sensitizer. An hypothesis to explain this action is proposed.