Cancer immunoediting and resistance to T cell-based immunotherapy

被引:0
|
作者
Jake S. O’Donnell
Michele W. L. Teng
Mark J. Smyth
机构
[1] Immunology in Cancer and Infection Laboratory,School of Medicine
[2] QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute,undefined
[3] Cancer Immunoregulation and Immunotherapy Laboratory,undefined
[4] QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute,undefined
[5] The University of Queensland,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Anticancer immunotherapies involving the use of immune-checkpoint inhibitors or adoptive cellular transfer have emerged as new therapeutic pillars within oncology. These treatments function by overcoming or relieving tumour-induced immunosuppression, thereby enabling immune-mediated tumour clearance. While often more effective and better tolerated than traditional and targeted therapies, many patients have innate or acquired resistance to immunotherapies. Cancer immunoediting is the process whereby the immune system can both constrain and promote tumour development, which proceeds through three phases termed elimination, equilibrium and escape. Throughout these phases, tumour immunogenicity is edited, and immunosuppressive mechanisms that enable disease progression are acquired. The mechanisms of resistance to immunotherapy seem to broadly overlap with those used by cancers as they undergo immunoediting to evade detection by the immune system. In this Review, we discuss how a deeper understanding of the mechanisms underlying the cancer immunoediting process can provide insight into the development of resistance to immunotherapies and the strategies that can be used to overcome such resistance.
引用
收藏
页码:151 / 167
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Immunotherapy of cancer with dendritic cell-based vaccines
    SK Nair
    Gene Therapy, 1998, 5 : 1445 - 1446
  • [32] Optimizing dendritic cell-based immunotherapy for cancer
    Zhong, Hua
    Shurin, Michael R.
    Han, Baohui
    EXPERT REVIEW OF VACCINES, 2007, 6 (03) : 333 - 345
  • [33] New frontiers in cell-based immunotherapy of cancer
    D'Elios, Mario Milco
    Del Prete, Gianfranco
    Amedei, Amedeo
    EXPERT OPINION ON THERAPEUTIC PATENTS, 2009, 19 (05) : 623 - 641
  • [34] NK Cell-Based Immunotherapy in Cancer Metastasis
    Lorenzo-Herrero, Seila
    Lopez-Soto, Alejandro
    Sordo-Bahamonde, Christian
    Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Ana P.
    Vitale, Massimo
    Gonzalez, Segundo
    CANCERS, 2019, 11 (01):
  • [35] CRISPRed macrophages for cell-based cancer immunotherapy
    Lee, Yi-Wei
    Ray, Moumita
    Hardie, Joseph
    Farkas, Michelle
    Rotello, Vincent
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 256
  • [36] Molecular imaging of cell-based cancer immunotherapy
    Liu, Gang
    Swierczewska, Magdalena
    Niu, Gang
    Zhang, Xiaoming
    Chen, Xiaoyuan
    MOLECULAR BIOSYSTEMS, 2011, 7 (04) : 993 - 1003
  • [37] Editorial: NK Cell-Based Cancer immunotherapy
    Borrego, Francisco
    Larrucea, Susana
    Solana, Rafael
    Tarazona, Raquel
    FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY, 2016, 7
  • [38] Dendritic Cell-Based Immunotherapy in Lung Cancer
    Stevens, Dieter
    Ingels, Joline
    Van Lint, Sandra
    Vandekerckhove, Bart
    Vermaelen, Karim
    FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY, 2021, 11
  • [39] NK Cell-Based Immunotherapy in Colorectal Cancer
    Della Chiesa, Mariella
    Setti, Chiara
    Giordano, Chiara
    Obino, Valentina
    Greppi, Marco
    Pesce, Silvia
    Marcenaro, Emanuela
    Rutigliani, Mariangela
    Provinciali, Nicoletta
    Paleari, Laura
    DeCensi, Andrea
    Sivori, Simona
    Carlomagno, Simona
    VACCINES, 2022, 10 (07)
  • [40] Synthetic biology in cell-based cancer immunotherapy
    Chakravarti, Deboki
    Wong, Wilson W.
    TRENDS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2015, 33 (08) : 449 - 461