Future Challenges in Cancer Resistance to Immunotherapy.
Marit J van ElsasThorbald van HallSjoerd H van der BurgPublished in: Cancers (2020)
Cancer immunotherapies, including checkpoint inhibitors, adoptive T cell transfer and therapeutic cancer vaccines, have shown promising response rates in clinical trials. Unfortunately, there is an increasing number of patients in which initially regressing tumors start to regrow due to an immunotherapy-driven acquired resistance. Studies on the underlying mechanisms reveal that these can be similar to well-known tumor intrinsic and extrinsic primary resistance factors that precluded the majority of patients from responding to immunotherapy in the first place. Here, we discuss primary and secondary immune resistance and point at strategies to identify potential new mechanisms of immune evasion. Ultimately, this may lead to improved immunotherapy strategies with improved clinical outcomes.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- end stage renal disease
- clinical trial
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- prognostic factors
- dna damage
- gene expression
- randomized controlled trial
- stem cells
- oxidative stress
- climate change
- mesenchymal stem cells
- risk assessment
- current status
- lymph node metastasis
- single cell
- genome wide
- double blind
- human health