Classification of current anticancer immunotherapies.


Autoria(s): Galluzzi L.; Vacchelli E.; Bravo-San Pedro J.M.; Buqué A.; Senovilla L.; Baracco E.E.; Bloy N.; Castoldi F.; Abastado J.P.; Agostinis P.; Apte R.N.; Aranda F.; Ayyoub M.; Beckhove P.; Blay J.Y.; Bracci L.; Caignard A.; Castelli C.; Cavallo F.; Celis E.; Cerundolo V.; Clayton A.; Colombo M.P.; Coussens L.; Dhodapkar M.V.; Eggermont A.M.; Fearon D.T.; Fridman W.H.; Fučíková J.; Gabrilovich D.I.; Galon J.; Garg A.; Ghiringhelli F.; Giaccone G.; Gilboa E.; Gnjatic S.; Hoos A.; Hosmalin A.; Jäger D.; Kalinski P.; Kärre K.; Kepp O.; Kiessling R.; Kirkwood J.M.; Klein E.; Knuth A.; Lewis C.E.; Liblau R.; Lotze M.T.; Lugli E.; Mach J.P.; Mattei F.; Mavilio D.; Melero I.; Melief C.J.; Mittendorf E.A.; Moretta L.; Odunsi A.; Okada H.; Palucka A.K.; Peter M.E.; Pienta K.J.; Porgador A.; Prendergast G.C.; Rabinovich G.A.; Restifo N.P.; Rizvi N.; Sautès-Fridman C.; Schreiber H.; Seliger B.; Shiku H.; Silva-Santos B.; Smyth M.J.; Speiser D.E.; Spisek R.; Srivastava P.K.; Talmadge J.E.; Tartour E.; Van Der Burg S.H.; Van Den Eynde B.J.; Vile R.; Wagner H.; Weber J.S.; Whiteside T.L.; Wolchok J.D.; Zitvogel L.; Zou W.; Kroemer G.
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

During the past decades, anticancer immunotherapy has evolved from a promising therapeutic option to a robust clinical reality. Many immunotherapeutic regimens are now approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency for use in cancer patients, and many others are being investigated as standalone therapeutic interventions or combined with conventional treatments in clinical studies. Immunotherapies may be subdivided into "passive" and "active" based on their ability to engage the host immune system against cancer. Since the anticancer activity of most passive immunotherapeutics (including tumor-targeting monoclonal antibodies) also relies on the host immune system, this classification does not properly reflect the complexity of the drug-host-tumor interaction. Alternatively, anticancer immunotherapeutics can be classified according to their antigen specificity. While some immunotherapies specifically target one (or a few) defined tumor-associated antigen(s), others operate in a relatively non-specific manner and boost natural or therapy-elicited anticancer immune responses of unknown and often broad specificity. Here, we propose a critical, integrated classification of anticancer immunotherapies and discuss the clinical relevance of these approaches.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_D59B3440A204

isbn:1949-2553 (Electronic)

pmid:25537519

isiid:000348038000001

http://my.unil.ch/serval/document/BIB_D59B3440A204.pdf

http://nbn-resolving.org/urn/resolver.pl?urn=urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_D59B3440A2048

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Oncotarget, vol. 5, no. 24, pp. 12472-12508

Palavras-Chave #adoptive cell transfer; checkpoint blockers; dendritic cell-based interventions; DNA-based vaccines; immunostimulatory cytokines; peptide-based vaccines; oncolytic viruses; Toll-like receptor agonists
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/review

article