Dual antibody therapy to harness the innate anti-tumor immune response to enhance antibody targeting of tumors

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Abstract

Cancer immunotherapy is a rapidly evolving field that offers a novel paradigm for cancer treatment: therapies focus on enhancing the immune system's innate and adaptive anti-tumor response. Early immunotherapeutics have achieved impressive clinical outcomes and monoclonal antibodies are now integral to therapeutic strategies in a variety of cancers. However, only recently have antibodies targeting innate immune cells entered clinical development. Innate immune effector cells play important roles in generating and maintaining antitumor immunity. Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) and antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) are important innate immune mechanisms for tumor eradication. These cytolytic processes are initiated by the detection of a tumor-targeting antibody and can be augmented by activating co-stimulatory pathways or blocking inhibitory signals on innate immune cells. The combination of FDA-approved monoclonal antibodies with innate effector-targeting antibodies has demonstrated potent preclinical therapeutic synergy and early-phase combinatorial clinical trials are ongoing.

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Chester, C., Marabelle, A., Houot, R., & Kohrt, H. E. (2015, April 1). Dual antibody therapy to harness the innate anti-tumor immune response to enhance antibody targeting of tumors. Current Opinion in Immunology. Elsevier Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coi.2014.12.010

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