Literature DB >> 12956434

Considerations on clinical use of T cell immunotherapy for cancer.

Gregory E Plautz1, Peter A Cohen, Suyu Shu.   

Abstract

The recognition by effector T lymphocytes of novel antigenic targets on tumor cells is the premise of specific, targeted immunotherapy of cancer. With the molecular characterization of peptide epitopes from melanoma antigens and, more recently, broadly expressed tumor antigens, there has been considerable enthusiasm for clinical evaluation of peptide tumor vaccines. Immunologic monitoring of vaccinated patients has demonstrated an expansion of CD8+ T cells that react with the relevant peptide and, more importantly, with native tumor. In most instances, however, vaccine-induced CD8+ T cell responses alone have not been sufficiently robust or sustained to translate into a high percentage of durable clinical responses. Vaccine strategies have also utilized dendritic cells (DCs) that have been modified to present tumor antigens. The superior antigen-processing capacity and co-stimulatory function of DCs convey a powerful stimulatory signal to both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Several strategies are attempting to broaden the immune response beyond single antigens by introducing the entire complement of tumor antigens into DCs. Adoptive immunotherapy is a promising strategy to recover tumor-reactive precursor T cells from patients, stimulate them to induce numerical expansion, and then re-infuse them. Ex vivo manipulation of the tumor-reactive T cells also permits cytotoxic therapy to be administered to the patient without damaging the effector cells. Recently, host lymphodepletion prior to adoptive transfer of effector T cells has resulted in an extremely high and sustained frequency of effectors that has achieved therapeutic efficacy against bulky metastatic disease in a substantial fraction of treated patients.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12956434

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Immunol Ther Exp (Warsz)        ISSN: 0004-069X            Impact factor:   4.291


  2 in total

1.  Phenotype, functions and fate of adoptively transferred tumor draining lymphocytes activated ex vivo in mice with an aggressive weakly immunogenic mammary carcinoma.

Authors:  Catriona H T Miller; Laura Graham; Harry D Bear
Journal:  BMC Immunol       Date:  2010-11-04       Impact factor: 3.615

2.  Incubation of antigen-sensitized T lymphocytes activated with bryostatin 1 + ionomycin in IL-7 + IL-15 increases yield of cells capable of inducing regression of melanoma metastases compared to culture in IL-2.

Authors:  Hanh K Le; Laura Graham; Catriona H T Miller; Maciej Kmieciak; Masoud H Manjili; Harry Douglas Bear
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2009-02-06       Impact factor: 6.968

  2 in total

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