Tricking the trickster: precision medicine approaches to counteract leukemia immune escape after transplant.
Annalisa TameniCristina ToffaloriLuca VagoPublished in: Blood (2024)
Over the last decades, significant improvements in reducing the toxicities of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) have widened its use as consolidation or salvage therapy for high-risk hematological malignancies. Nevertheless, relapse of the original malignant disease remains an open issue with unsatisfactory salvage options and limited rationales to select among them. In the last years, several studies have highlighted that relapse is often associated with specific genomic and nongenomic mechanisms of immune escape. In this review we summarize the current knowledge about these modalities of immune evasion, focusing on the mechanisms that leverage antigen presentation and pathologic rewiring of the bone marrow microenvironment. We present examples of how this biologic information can be translated into specific approaches to treat relapse, discuss the status of the clinical trials for patients who relapsed after a transplant, and show how dissecting the complex immunobiology of allo-HCT represents a crucial step toward developing new personalized approaches to improve clinical outcomes.
Keyphrases
- bone marrow
- clinical trial
- acute myeloid leukemia
- mesenchymal stem cells
- healthcare
- stem cells
- stem cell transplantation
- rheumatoid arthritis
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- squamous cell carcinoma
- multiple myeloma
- dna methylation
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- copy number
- cell proliferation
- hodgkin lymphoma
- cell death
- locally advanced
- lymph node
- health information
- cell cycle arrest
- rectal cancer
- high dose