Plasmid IL-2 electroporation in melanoma

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Abstract

Intratumoral gene electroporation uses electric charges to facilitate entry of plasmid DNA into cells in a reproducible and highly efficient manner, especially to accessible sites such as cutaneous and subcutaneous melanomas. Effective for locally treated disease, electroporation of plasmid DNA encoding interleukin-12 can also induce responses in untreated distant disease, suggesting that adaptive immune responses are being elicited that can target melanoma-associated antigens. In vivo electroporation with immunomodulatory cytokine DNA is a promising approach that can trigger systemic anti-tumor immune responses without the systemic toxicity associated with intravenous cytokine delivery and potentially offer complete long-term tumor regression. © 2012 Landes Bioscience.

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Cha, E., & Daud, A. (2012, November). Plasmid IL-2 electroporation in melanoma. Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics. https://doi.org/10.4161/hv.22573

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