ISA Pharmaceuticals introduce strategies to improve immunotherapy against cancer
In a paper just published in Clinical Cancer Research, a team of scientists from Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) and ISA Pharmaceuticals report that in preclinical mouse models of cancer, the injection of a CTLA-4 blocking antibody in a slow-release formulation close to the tumor is very effective in activating a systemic anti-tumor (CD8+) T cell response. CTLA-4 is a crucial immune checkpoint protein that down-regulates the body’s immune response. The low-dose local treatment (50μg subcutaneously in a slow-release vehicle) eradicates tumors, including distant tumors, as effectively as a high-dose systemic treatment (2x200μg intraperitoneally). The method also leads to a 1000-fold decrease of antibody levels in the serum, thereby reducing adverse events and the risk of autoimmunity.
These findings are supported by an increasing number of studies demonstrating that local targets, mainly present in the microenvironment of tumors and draining lymph nodes, are key players in tumor progression. As published in a second paper by researchers from LUMC and ISA, a review in the International Journal of Cancer, local immunotherapies have clear advantages over systemic treatments, both in their ability to shift tumor-promoting mechanisms towards effective tumor-eradicating immunity and in terms of reducing the risks of systemic administration.
In the third publication in Seminars in Immunology, current cancer immunotherapy approaches are reviewed, concluding that most standalone immunotherapeutic strategies either fail to affect progressive diseases and survival significantly - or only do so in a minority of patients. The authors support combinations of synthetic vaccines that stimulate tumor-specific T cell responses and adjuvants, immune-modulating antibodies, cytokines, or chemotherapy.
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Topic world Antibodies
Antibodies are specialized molecules of our immune system that can specifically recognize and neutralize pathogens or foreign substances. Antibody research in biotech and pharma has recognized this natural defense potential and is working intensively to make it therapeutically useful. From monoclonal antibodies used against cancer or autoimmune diseases to antibody-drug conjugates that specifically transport drugs to disease cells - the possibilities are enormous
Topic world Antibodies
Antibodies are specialized molecules of our immune system that can specifically recognize and neutralize pathogens or foreign substances. Antibody research in biotech and pharma has recognized this natural defense potential and is working intensively to make it therapeutically useful. From monoclonal antibodies used against cancer or autoimmune diseases to antibody-drug conjugates that specifically transport drugs to disease cells - the possibilities are enormous