Reinstating endogenous antitumor immunity: The concept of therapeutic management of cancer

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Abstract

Strong evidence points to the role of cancer immunoediting and tumor immune infiltrates in regulating cancer progression. By understanding the immune tumor microenvironment, we can now target key pathways that suppress endogenous antitumor responses, thereby re-instating such immune responses and identifying novel targets for immune therapies. Therapies targeting oncogenic pathways and checkpoint blockades turn on a new paradigm shift in immune-therapy for cancer with remarkable clinical efficacy seen in various malignancies. However, a lot of cancer patients will fail to respond and therefore, it becomes crucial to identify biomarkers to predict who of the patients will most likely benefit from these therapies.

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Pistamaltzian, N. F., Perez, S. A., & Baxevanis, C. N. (2016). Reinstating endogenous antitumor immunity: The concept of therapeutic management of cancer. Forum of Clinical Oncology, 7(1), 4–16. https://doi.org/10.1515/fco-2016-0005

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