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Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies

Multimodal approaches are nowadays successfully applied in cancer therapy. Primary locally acting therapies such as radiotherapy (RT) and surgery are combined with systemic administration of chemotherapeutics. Nevertheless, the therapy of cancer is still a big challenge in medicine. The treatments o...

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Autores principales: Weiss, Eva-Maria, Wunderlich, Roland, Ebel, Nina, Rubner, Yvonne, Schlücker, Eberhard, Meyer-Pittroff, Roland, Ott, Oliver J., Fietkau, Rainer, Gaipl, Udo S., Frey, Benjamin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3466463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23087898
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2012.00132
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author Weiss, Eva-Maria
Wunderlich, Roland
Ebel, Nina
Rubner, Yvonne
Schlücker, Eberhard
Meyer-Pittroff, Roland
Ott, Oliver J.
Fietkau, Rainer
Gaipl, Udo S.
Frey, Benjamin
author_facet Weiss, Eva-Maria
Wunderlich, Roland
Ebel, Nina
Rubner, Yvonne
Schlücker, Eberhard
Meyer-Pittroff, Roland
Ott, Oliver J.
Fietkau, Rainer
Gaipl, Udo S.
Frey, Benjamin
author_sort Weiss, Eva-Maria
collection PubMed
description Multimodal approaches are nowadays successfully applied in cancer therapy. Primary locally acting therapies such as radiotherapy (RT) and surgery are combined with systemic administration of chemotherapeutics. Nevertheless, the therapy of cancer is still a big challenge in medicine. The treatments often fail to induce long-lasting anti-tumor responses. Tumor recurrences and metastases result. Immunotherapies are therefore ideal adjuncts to standard tumor therapies since they aim to activate the patient's immune system against malignant cells even outside the primary treatment areas (abscopal effects). Especially cancer vaccines may have the potential both to train the immune system against cancer cells and to generate an immunological memory, resulting in long-lasting anti-tumor effects. However, despite promising results in phase I and II studies, most of the concepts finally failed. There are some critical aspects in development and application of cancer vaccines that may decide on their efficiency. The time point and frequency of medication, usage of an adequate immune adjuvant, the vaccine's immunogenic potential, and the tumor burden of the patient are crucial. Whole tumor cell vaccines have advantages compared to peptide-based ones since a variety of tumor antigens (TAs) are present. The master requirements of cell-based, therapeutic tumor vaccines are the complete inactivation of the tumor cells and the increase of their immunogenicity. Since the latter is highly connected with the cell death modality, the inactivation procedure of the tumor cell material may significantly influence the vaccine's efficiency. We therefore also introduce high hydrostatic pressure (HHP) as an innovative inactivation technology for tumor cell-based vaccines and outline that HHP efficiently inactivates tumor cells by enhancing their immunogenicity. Finally studies are presented proving that anti-tumor immune responses can be triggered by combining RT with selected immune therapies.
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spelling pubmed-34664632012-10-19 Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies Weiss, Eva-Maria Wunderlich, Roland Ebel, Nina Rubner, Yvonne Schlücker, Eberhard Meyer-Pittroff, Roland Ott, Oliver J. Fietkau, Rainer Gaipl, Udo S. Frey, Benjamin Front Oncol Oncology Multimodal approaches are nowadays successfully applied in cancer therapy. Primary locally acting therapies such as radiotherapy (RT) and surgery are combined with systemic administration of chemotherapeutics. Nevertheless, the therapy of cancer is still a big challenge in medicine. The treatments often fail to induce long-lasting anti-tumor responses. Tumor recurrences and metastases result. Immunotherapies are therefore ideal adjuncts to standard tumor therapies since they aim to activate the patient's immune system against malignant cells even outside the primary treatment areas (abscopal effects). Especially cancer vaccines may have the potential both to train the immune system against cancer cells and to generate an immunological memory, resulting in long-lasting anti-tumor effects. However, despite promising results in phase I and II studies, most of the concepts finally failed. There are some critical aspects in development and application of cancer vaccines that may decide on their efficiency. The time point and frequency of medication, usage of an adequate immune adjuvant, the vaccine's immunogenic potential, and the tumor burden of the patient are crucial. Whole tumor cell vaccines have advantages compared to peptide-based ones since a variety of tumor antigens (TAs) are present. The master requirements of cell-based, therapeutic tumor vaccines are the complete inactivation of the tumor cells and the increase of their immunogenicity. Since the latter is highly connected with the cell death modality, the inactivation procedure of the tumor cell material may significantly influence the vaccine's efficiency. We therefore also introduce high hydrostatic pressure (HHP) as an innovative inactivation technology for tumor cell-based vaccines and outline that HHP efficiently inactivates tumor cells by enhancing their immunogenicity. Finally studies are presented proving that anti-tumor immune responses can be triggered by combining RT with selected immune therapies. Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3466463/ /pubmed/23087898 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2012.00132 Text en Copyright © 2012 Weiss, Wunderlich, Ebel, Rubner, Schlücker, Meyer-Pittroff, Ott, Fietkau, Gaipl and Frey. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and subject to any copyright notices concerning any third-party graphics etc.
spellingShingle Oncology
Weiss, Eva-Maria
Wunderlich, Roland
Ebel, Nina
Rubner, Yvonne
Schlücker, Eberhard
Meyer-Pittroff, Roland
Ott, Oliver J.
Fietkau, Rainer
Gaipl, Udo S.
Frey, Benjamin
Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies
title Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies
title_full Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies
title_fullStr Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies
title_full_unstemmed Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies
title_short Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies
title_sort selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3466463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23087898
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2012.00132
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