pubmed-article:11956096 | pubmed:abstractText | Most cytotoxic drugs have gross effects on the immune system, such as neutropenia and lymphopenia. However, their effects on tumor-specific immune responses are unknown. Gemcitabine is a nucleoside analogue that is frequently used to treat non-small cell lung cancer. It is also active in other malignancies, either alone or in combination with cisplatin. Here, we investigate its effects on antigen-specific antitumor immunity using a murine tumor cell line transfected to express influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA). CD4(+), CD8(+), and B220(+) lymphocyte numbers all decreased during chemotherapy (120 microg/g, i.p., every third day for five doses), but B cells were selectively depleted. Gemcitabine induced a profound suppression of the IgG antibody response to HA, and this was unrelated to tumor size. In contrast, in vitro T-lymphocyte recall responses to the class I- and class II-restricted dominant peptide epitopes of HA were enhanced in tumor-bearing, gemcitabine-treated mice. We found that gemcitabine was >2-fold more potent in its ability to inhibit B-lymphocyte proliferation compared with T-lymphocyte proliferation. Thus, gemcitabine does not appear to be detrimental to specific antitumor cellular immunity and may be useful in combination chemo-immunotherapy protocols. In contrast, vaccination protocols requiring a humoral immune response for maximal efficacy may be compromised in patients treated with gemcitabine. | lld:pubmed |