Title:Immunotherapy Approaches in Cancer Treatment
Volume: 16
Issue: 9
Author(s): Pavel Klener, Pavel Otahal, Lucie Lateckova and Pavel Klener
Affiliation:
Keywords:
Cancer immunotherapy, cytokines, monoclonal antibodies, cancer vaccines, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR),
adoptive T cell therapy.
Abstract: Tumor immune surveillance paradigm presumes that most pre-malignant cells or early malignant
lesions can be eliminated (or at least controlled) by cells of the immune system. A critical feature
that distinguishes advanced tumors from early neoplastic lesions is their capability to evade immune
control. As a consequence, vast majority of clinically evident (advanced) tumors are poorly immunogenic.
The principle goal of immunotherapy is thus a resurrection of the patient’s inefficient or
suppressed immune system so that it would once again become capable of launching sustained cytolytic attacks against
tumor cells, which would ideally result in total and permanent eradication of cancer. Such activation of patient’s anticancer
immunity, however, can be achieved by strikingly different ways. This current review discusses diverse innovative
immunotherapy approaches, which in the last 20 years achieved miraculous successes in the ever-lasting battle against
cancer, including cytokine-based immunotherapy approaches, therapeutic monoclonal antibodies and their derivatives,
cancer vaccines, and cell-based immunotherapy approaches.