Literature DB >> 24857060

Immunotherapy for glioma: from illusion to realistic prospects?

Pierre-Yves Dietrich1, Valérie Dutoit1, Paul R Walker1.   

Abstract

There is now evidence that the rules established for tumor immunology and immunotherapy in general are relevant for brain tumors. Treatment strategies explored have mainly involved vaccines using either tumor cells or components, and vaccines with defined synthetic peptides. This latter approach offers the advantage to select well-characterized antigens with selective or preferential expression on glioma. This is a prerequisite because collateral damage to the brain is not allowed. A second strategy which is reaching clinical trials is T cell therapy using the patients' own lymphocytes engineered to become tumor reactive. Tumor specificity can be conferred by forced expression of either a high-avidity T cell receptor or an antitumor antibody (the latter cells are called chimeric antigen receptors). An advantage of T cell engineering is the possibility to modify the cells to augment cellular activation, in vivo persistence and resistance to the tumor immunosuppressive milieu. A direct targeting of the hostile glioma microenvironment will additionally be required for achieving potent immunotherapy and various trials are assessing this issue. Finally, combining immunotherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors and chemotherapy must be explored within rigorous clinical trials that favor constant interactions between the bench and bedside. Regarding immunotherapy for glioma patients, what was an unrealistic dream a decade ago is today a credible prospect.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24857060     DOI: 10.14694/EdBook_AM.2014.34.51

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Soc Clin Oncol Educ Book        ISSN: 1548-8748


  4 in total

1.  Immunosuppressive Myeloid Cells' Blockade in the Glioma Microenvironment Enhances the Efficacy of Immune-Stimulatory Gene Therapy.

Authors:  Neha Kamran; Padma Kadiyala; Meghna Saxena; Marianela Candolfi; Youping Li; Mariela A Moreno-Ayala; Nicholas Raja; Diana Shah; Pedro R Lowenstein; Maria G Castro
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2017-01-04       Impact factor: 11.454

2.  MiR-330-3p functions as a tumor suppressor that regulates glioma cell proliferation and migration by targeting CELF1.

Authors:  Hongbin Wang; Guijing Liu; Tao Li; Naizhu Wang; Jingkun Wu; Hua Zhi
Journal:  Arch Med Sci       Date:  2020-05-08       Impact factor: 3.318

3.  Antigenic expression and spontaneous immune responses support the use of a selected peptide set from the IMA950 glioblastoma vaccine for immunotherapy of grade II and III glioma.

Authors:  Valérie Dutoit; Denis Migliorini; Giulia Ranzanici; Eliana Marinari; Valérie Widmer; Johannes Alexander Lobrinus; Shahan Momjian; Joseph Costello; Paul R Walker; Hideho Okada; Toni Weinschenk; Christel Herold-Mende; Pierre-Yves Dietrich
Journal:  Oncoimmunology       Date:  2017-11-07       Impact factor: 8.110

4.  Abundant expression of ferroptosis-related SAT1 is related to unfavorable outcome and immune cell infiltration in low-grade glioma.

Authors:  Yanhua Mou; Lu Zhang; Zhantao Liu; Xiujun Song
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 4.430

  4 in total

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