Advances in the understanding and therapeutic manipulation of cancer immune responsiveness: a Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) review.

Journal: Journal For Immunotherapy Of Cancer
Published:
Abstract

Cancer immunotherapy-including immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) and adoptive cell therapy (ACT)-has become a standard, potentially curative treatment for a subset of advanced solid and liquid tumors. However, most patients with cancer do not benefit from the rapidly evolving improvements in the understanding of principal mechanisms determining cancer immune responsiveness (CIR); including patient-specific genetically determined and acquired factors, as well as intrinsic cancer cell biology. Though CIR is multifactorial, fundamental concepts are emerging that should be considered for the design of novel therapeutic strategies and related clinical studies. Recent advancements as well as novel approaches to address the limitations of current treatments are discussed here, with a specific focus on ICI and ACT.

Authors
Alessandra Cesano, Ryan Augustin, Luigi Barrea, Davide Bedognetti, Tullia Bruno, Alberto Carturan, Christian Hammer, Winson Ho, Jakob Kather, Tomas Kirchhoff, Rongze Lu, Jennifer Mcquade, Yana Najjar, Violena Pietrobon, Marco Ruella, Rhine Shen, Laura Soldati, Christine Spencer, Allison Betof Warner, Sarah Warren, Elad Ziv, Francesco Marincola