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Prostate CancerAdvances in Immunotherapy

 

作者: Arthur A. Hurwitz,   Paul Yanover,   Mary Markowitz,   James P. Allison,   Eugene D. Kwon,  

 

期刊: BioDrugs  (ADIS Available online 2003)
卷期: Volume 17, issue 2  

页码: 131-138

 

ISSN:1173-8804

 

年代: 2003

 

出版商: ADIS

 

关键词: Dendritic cells, therapeutic use;Immunotherapies, therapeutic use;Monoclonal antibodies, therapeutic use;Prostate cancer, treatment;Prostate cancer vaccine, therapeutic use;Research and development;Vaccines, therapeutic use

 

数据来源: ADIS

 

摘要:

The absence of curative therapies for advanced or recurrent forms of prostate cancer has prompted a vigorous search for novel treatment strategies. Immunotherapy encompasses one particularly promising systemic approach to the treatment of prostate cancer. Immune-based strategies for treating prostate cancer have recently been facilitated by the identification of a number of prostate tissue/tumour antigens that can be targeted, either by antibody or T cells, to promote prostate tumour cell injury or death. These same prostate antigens can also be used for the construction of vaccines to induce prostate-specific T cell-mediated immunity. Greater insight into specific mechanisms that govern antigen-specific T cell activation has brought with it a number of innovative methods to induce and enhance T cell-mediated responses against prostate tumours. For instance, autologous dendritic cells loaded with prostate antigens have proved useful to induce prostate-specific T cell activation. Similarly,in vivomanipulations of T cell costimulatory pathway receptors can greatly facilitate tumour-specific T cell activation and potentiate T cell-mediated responses against a number of malignancies, including prostate cancer. For example, blocking T cell cytotoxic lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) receptor binding to its ligand prevents the down-regulation of T cell responses and can even potentiate T cell antitumoural immunity in mouse models of prostate cancer. Androgen ablation (AA) may induce prostate tumour/tissue-specific T cell mediated inflammation and, as such, a phase II trial is currently in progress to ascertain whether CTLA-4 blockade can enhance AA-induced treatment responses in patients with advanced prostate cancer. Nevertheless, further basic and clinical investigation is still required to establish immunotherapy as a true prostate cancer treatment option.

 

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