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. 2006 Apr 13;56(1):13–24. doi: 10.1007/s00262-006-0159-1

Table 1.

The effect of IFNγ on cytokine-dependent proliferation by native human AML cells: a summary of the results for 67 consecutive patients

Exogenous cytokine Number of patients with detectable proliferation in IFNγ-free controlsa Statistical comparison of proliferative response (mean cpm ± standard error) Number of patients with >20% inhibitionb
Cultures without IFNγ Cultures with IFNγ P valuec
None 21 5,885±1,376 9,692±3,456 NS
IL1RA 25 5,768±1,113 5,169±1,519 NS
IL1β 40 11,911±3,353 6,060±1,679 0.001 16/40
IL3 49 17,543±3,661 12,048±2,015 0.052 22/49
SCF 50 22,491±4,553 11,078±2,510 <0.0005 36/50
Flt3L 53 15,107±3,252 12,313±1,914 NS
GM-CSF 48 13,554±3,099 7,929±1,425 0.039 23/48
G-CSF 49 16,037±3,716 9,672±1,912 0.015 25/49

Native human AML cells were cultured in serum-free medium and proliferation assayed as 3H-thymidine incorporation after 7 days. The results are presented as counts per minute (cpm)

NS no significance

aA total of 67 consecutive patients were examined, but only those patients with detectable proliferation (>1,000 cpm) either in the IFNγ-containing or corresponding IFNγ-free control were included in the statistical analysis

bThe column indicates the number of patients who showed an IFNγ-induced alteration corresponding to at least 2,000 cpm and exceeding 20% of the control response

cThe two-tailed Wilcoxon’s signed rank test was used for the statistical analysis