Tumori
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Patients with metastatic melanoma often have defects in the percentage and function of peripheral blood NK cells, which are involved in the non-specific innate antitumor immune response, and T cells, which participate in the specific acquired antitumor immune response. The aim of this study was to investigate in more detail not only the percentage but also the activation status and function of NK and T cells in patients with metastatic melanoma prior to therapy. ⋯ The novel finding in this study of melanoma patients with metastatic disease is the impaired perforin-dependent NK cell cytotoxic mechanism, which was recently shown to be primarily responsible for preventing metastasis. Another interesting finding was the generally hyporeactive status of T cells, possibly resulting from persistent antigenic stimulation. The observed dysfunction of NK and T cells in patients with metastatic melanoma prior to therapy point to the need to supplement chemotherapy with appropriate immunotherapeutic agents in order to overcome the immunosuppression associated with advanced malignancy.