Immune therapy has emerged as a promising area of cancer therapeutics based on its potential for tumor selectivity and targeting of chemotherapy-resistant clones. Allogeneic transplantation produces durable remissions in a subset of patients, albeit at the cost of graftversushost disease. Recent years have witnessed efforts to induce more selective immune responses via dendritic cell vaccines, autologous and engineered T-cell therapy, and immune checkpoint blockade. Optimizing these immunotherapeutic approaches, understanding how to best use them in combination, and determining how to integrate them with standard anti-myeloma therapy could provide the potential to alter the natural history of this disease.
CITATION STYLE
Rosenblatt, J., & Avigan, D. (2015, November 1). Role of immune therapies for myeloma. JNCCN Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network. Harborside Press. https://doi.org/10.6004/jnccn.2015.0168
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