4.6 Review

Cancer Immunoediting in Malignant Glioma

Journal

NEUROSURGERY
Volume 71, Issue 2, Pages 201-222

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1227/NEU.0b013e31824f840d

Keywords

Cancer immunoediting; Elimination; Equilibrium; Glioma; Immunotherapy; Tumor escape

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Significant work from many laboratories over the last decade in the study of cancer immunology has resulted in the development of the cancer immunoediting hypothesis. This contemporary framework of the naturally arising immune system-tumor interaction is thought to comprise 3 phases: elimination, wherein immunity subserves an extrinsic tumor suppressor function and destroys nascent tumor cells; equilibrium, wherein tumor cells are constrained in a period of latency under immune control; and escape, wherein tumor cells outpace immunity and progress clinically. In this review, we address in detail the relevance of the cancer immunoediting concept to neurosurgeons and neuro-oncologists treating and studying malignant glioma by exploring the de novo immune response to these tumors, how these tumors may persist in vivo, the mechanisms by which these cells may escape/attenuate immunity, and ultimately how this concept may influence our immunotherapeutic approaches.

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