PMID: 26321082Sep 1, 2015Paper

Novel mechanisms and approaches in immunotherapy for brain tumors

Discovery Medicine
Gaetano Finocchiaro, Serena Pellegatta

Abstract

Converging data indicate that the immune system is able to recognize cancer epitopes as non-self and mount an immune reaction that may erase, or temporarily block, tumor growth. The immune pressure supports the amplification of immune resistant tumor clones, creating an immune suppressive environment that leads to the formation of a clinically relevant tumor. These general observations also apply to brain tumors and specifically to gliomas. Cancer immunotherapy strategies are aimed at reverting such immune suppression. Two approaches are already used in the clinics. The first one, peptide immunotherapy, has been oriented to the most aggressive glioma, glioblastoma (GBM) where, in the context of EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) amplification, a large deletion arises and creates a novel, cancer-specific antigen, EGFRvIII. The second one is dendritic cell immunotherapy. Dendritic cells are potent antigen presenting cells that can be pulsed with autologous tumor lysate or peptide pp65 from cytomegalovirus (CMV) that is present in GBM but not in normal brain. Antigen presentation by dendritic cells is bolstered by preconditioning their injection site with the tetanus/diphtheria toxoid. The third approach is adoptive cell ther...Continue Reading

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