| Literature DB >> 29872569 |
Elena García-Martínez1, Melody Smith2, Aitziber Buqué3, Fernando Aranda4, Francisco Ayala de la Peña1, Alejandra Ivars1, Manuel Sanchez Cánovas1, Ma Angeles Vicente Conesa1, Jitka Fucikova5,6, Radek Spisek5,6, Laurence Zitvogel7,8,9,10, Guido Kroemer11,12,13,14,15,16,17, Lorenzo Galluzzi3,11,18.
Abstract
Cytokines regulate virtually aspects of innate and adaptive immunity, including the initiation, execution and extinction of tumor-targeting immune responses. Over the past three decades, the possibility of using recombinant cytokines as a means to elicit or boost clinically relevant anticancer immune responses has attracted considerable attention. However, only three cytokines have been approved so far by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency for use in cancer patients, namely, recombinant interleukin (IL)-2 and two variants of recombinant interferon alpha 2 (IFN-α2a and IFN-α2b). Moreover, the use of these cytokines in the clinics is steadily decreasing, mostly as a consequence of: (1) the elevated pleiotropism of IL-2, IFN-α2a and IFN-α2b, resulting in multiple unwarranted effects; and (2) the development of highly effective immunostimulatory therapeutics, such as immune checkpoint blockers. Despite this and other obstacles, research in the field continues as alternative cytokines with restricted effects on specific cell populations are being evaluated. Here, we summarize research preclinical and clinical developments on the use of recombinant cytokines for immunostimulation in cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: CAR T cells; CTLA4; GM-CSF; IL-15; PD-1; pembrolizumab
Year: 2018 PMID: 29872569 PMCID: PMC5980390 DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2018.1433982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110