4.7 Article

Cancer Immunotherapy Comes of Age

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 36, Pages 4828-4836

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2011.38.0899

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P30 CA86862, P50 CA97274, R01 CA137198, R01 CA142779]
  2. Melanoma Research Alliance
  3. Barney Family Foundation
  4. Medarex/Bristol-Myers Squibb
  5. Pfizer

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Cancer immunotherapy comprises a variety of treatment approaches, incorporating the tremendous specificity of the adaptive immune system (T cells and antibodies) as well as the diverse and potent cytotoxic weaponry of both adaptive and innate immunity. Immunotherapy strategies include antitumor monoclonal antibodies, cancer vaccines, adoptive transfer of ex vivo activated T and natural killer cells, and administration of antibodies or recombinant proteins that either costimulate immune cells or block immune inhibitory pathways (so-called immune checkpoints). Although clear clinical efficacy has been demonstrated with antitumor antibodies since the late 1990s, other immunotherapies had not been shown to be effective until recently, when a spate of successes established the broad potential of this therapeutic modality. These successes are based on fundamental scientific advances demonstrating the toleragenic nature of cancer and the pivotal role of the tumor immune microenvironment in suppressing antitumor immunity. New therapies based on a sophisticated knowledge of immune-suppressive cells, soluble factors, and signaling pathways are designed to break tolerance and reactivate antitumor immunity to induce potent, long-lasting responses. Preclinical models indicate the importance of a complex integrated immune response in eliminating established tumors and validate the exploration of combinatorial treatment regimens, which are anticipated to be far more effective than monotherapies. Unlike conventional cancer therapies, most immunotherapies are active and dynamic, capable of inducing immune memory to propagate a successful rebalancing of the equilibrium between tumor and host. J Clin Oncol 29: 4828-4836. (C) 2011 by American Society of Clinical Oncology

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