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Macrophages as a "weapon" in anticancer cellular immunotherapy.

Dmitry L AmininYun-Ming Wang
Published in: The Kaohsiung journal of medical sciences (2021)
Anticancer immunotherapy is a treatment that activates the immune system to fight the tumor. Immunotherapy has several advantages over other cancer treatments in that anticancer immunotherapy displays high specificity, low side effects, and can combine with various conventional therapies. In recent years, oncologists have shown increasing interest in using macrophages for adoptive cell therapy and predict a bright future of macrophage-directed therapy for eliminating cancer. The focus of increased research interest is the classically activated M1 macrophages exhibiting pronounced tumoricidal activity, and the alternatively activated M2 tumor-associated macrophages, which otherwise help malignant cells evading attack by the immune system. M1 macrophages may represent an effective weapon in anticancer cellular immunotherapy, and the use of autoimmune macrophages properly prepared for antitumor administration is one of the promising ways for personalized therapy of cancer patients. The present report mainly discusses some modern aspects of the problem in application of activated M1 macrophage in anticancer therapy and reviews relevant publications up to 2021.
Keyphrases
  • cell therapy
  • papillary thyroid
  • adipose tissue
  • stem cells
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • randomized controlled trial
  • multiple sclerosis
  • bone marrow
  • cell death
  • smoking cessation