Abstract
Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) plays an important role in cell to cell interactions. In malignant melanoma, ICAM-1 expression correlates with malignant behavior. We used monoclonal antibodies, antiICAM-1, anti-CD4+, anti-CD8+, and anti-CD11c+ to study the effect of interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) on the expression of ICAM-1 by melanoma cells in regional metastases and its correlation to the occurrence of CD4+, CD8+, and CD11c+ cells close to tumor cells and in the tumor stroma. We also estimated the expression of ICAM1 and regressive changes in malignant melanoma metastases, correlating the duration of treatment to these effects of IFN-alpha . Twenty-three IFN-alpha-treated and 10 untreated patients with regional metastatic malignant melanoma were studied. The duration of IFN-alpha treatment influenced the expression of ICAM-1. In metastases from patients treated for 1 week only, 1 of 5 showed high expression of ICAM-1 compared with 6 of 11 of those treated for 3 weeks (p = 0.01, chi-square test for trend comparing untreated patients and patients with various durations of IFN-alpha treatment). In IFN-alpha-treated patients with low expression of ICAM-1, none of 7 metastases showed CD4+ cells infiltrating close to tumor cells, in contrast to 6 of 10 metastases expressing high amounts of ICAM-1 (p=0.03). Similarly, the expression of ICAM-1 was found to correlate with the occurrence of CD8+ cells close to the tumor cells (p=0.04). We also showed a correlation between ICAM-1 expression and histologic evidence of tumor regression (p=0.02).
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