Literature DB >> 23645169

Cellular immunotherapy for plasma cell myeloma.

A L Garfall1, D T Vogl, B M Weiss, E A Stadtmauer.   

Abstract

Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation for plasma cell myeloma can lead to graft-vs-myeloma immunity and long-term survivorship, but limited efficacy and associated toxicities have prevented its widespread use. Cellular immunotherapies seek to induce more specific, reliable and potent antimyeloma immune responses with less treatment-related risk than is possible with allogeneic transplantation. Strategies under development include infusion of vaccine-primed and ex vivo expanded/costimulated autologous T cells after high-dose melphalan, genetic engineering of autologous T cells with receptors for myeloma-specific epitopes, administration of DC/plasma cell fusions and administration expanded marrow-infiltrating lymphocytes. In addition, novel immunomodulatory drugs such as inhibitors of the programmed death-1 T cell regulatory pathway may synergize with cellular immunotherapies.

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Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23645169     DOI: 10.1038/bmt.2013.54

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bone Marrow Transplant        ISSN: 0268-3369            Impact factor:   5.483


  2 in total

Review 1.  Not too little, not too much-just right! (Better ways to give high dose melphalan).

Authors:  P J Shaw; C E Nath; H M Lazarus
Journal:  Bone Marrow Transplant       Date:  2014-08-18       Impact factor: 5.483

2.  Cytotoxic T Cell Responses Induced by CS1/CRT Fusion DNA Vaccine in a Human Plasmacytoma Model.

Authors:  Xueshi Ye; Wanli Li; Jinwen Huang; Lifei Zhang; Ye Zhang
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2020-11-20       Impact factor: 6.244

  2 in total

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