| Literature DB >> 26709361 |
Susan M Hiniker1, Holden T Maecker2, Susan J Knox1.
Abstract
Success with recent immunotherapies has resulted in previously unattainable response rates, as well as durable responses in diseases with historically poor prognoses. The combination of radiation therapy and immunotherapy has been a recent area of active investigation, with exciting results in a subset of patients. However, patient characteristics predictive of probable benefit from therapy and clinically meaningful biomarkers indicative of the early development of an antitumor immune response have yet to be identified. What is needed is a better way to predict which patients are likely to benefit from therapy, which would allow those patients unlikely to benefit from immunotherapy to be spared potentially futile therapies, thereby avoiding unnecessary risks of toxicity and costly treatment. Here, we summarize the early data on predictors of clinical response to immunotherapy, and to immunotherapy in combination with radiation.Entities:
Keywords: Abscopal effect; Biomarkers; Immunotherapy; Predictors of response; Radiation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26709361 PMCID: PMC4685037 DOI: 10.1007/s13566-015-0219-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1948-7908
Fig. 1Potential positive (green) and negative (red) predictors of outcome in anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. Some biomarkers have also been shown for other types of immunotherapy, though there is variation by immunotherapy and tumor type. Most of these biomarkers are measured from immunohistochemistry (IHC) of tumor biopsy sections; activated NK cells and lymphocyte counts are derived from peripheral blood