| Literature DB >> 29109964 |
Marlena Janiczek1,2, Łukasz Szylberg1, Anna Kasperska1, Adam Kowalewski1, Martyna Parol1, Paulina Antosik1, Barbara Radecka2, Andrzej Marszałek3.
Abstract
Prostate cancer treatment is currently based on surgical removal, radiotherapy, and hormone therapy. In recent years, another therapeutic method has emerged-immunological treatment. Immunotherapy modulates and strengthens one's immune responses against cancer. Neoplastic cells naturally escape from the control of the immune system, and the main goal of immune therapy is to bring the control back. Satisfying outcomes after treatment of advanced melanoma and lung cancer suggest a great potential of immunotherapy as an approach for other tumors' treatment, especially in patients primarily introduced to palliative care. After initial clinical trials, immunotherapy seems to have different side effects than chemotherapy. Prostate cancer was the first neoplasm in which a specific vaccine significantly improved survival. There is a tremendous potential for synergistic combinations of immunotherapy with conventional cancer treatments. A combination of several drugs or methods can be a key in radical treatment of metastatic prostate cancer as demonstrated by preliminary studies.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29109964 PMCID: PMC5646317 DOI: 10.1155/2017/4861570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Types of cancer immunotherapy.
| Blockade of immune checkpoint | Cytokines | Therapeutic vaccines |
|---|---|---|
| Disrupts signals that allow cancer immune evasion | Direct the immune system against cancer cells | Enhance host's natural immune response against cancer |
Prostate cancer vaccines.
| Drug | Agent description-based vaccine |
|---|---|
| Sipuleucel-T | Targets prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) |
| Prostvac-VF | Fowlpox virus |
| GVAX | Expressing GM-CSF |
| DCVAC/PCa | Poly I:C |
The blockade of immune checkpoints in prostate cancer.
| Drug | Agent description |
|---|---|
| Ipilimumab | The inhibition of CTLA-4 |
| Pembrolizumab (previously known as MK-3475 and lambrolizumab) | The inhibition of PD-1 |
| Pidilizumab | The inhibition of PD-1 |