Immunology and Biotherapies
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Immunology and Biotherapies
Page Ressources et Actualités du DIU immunologie et biothérapies
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Scooped by Gilbert C FAURE
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Combination cancer immunotherapies tailored to the tumour microenvironment : Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology : Nature Publishing Group

Evidence suggests that cancer immunotherapy will be a major part of the combination treatment plan for many patients with many cancer types in the near future. There are many types of immune processes involving different antitumour and tumour-promoting leucocytes, and tumour cells use many strategies to evade the immune response. The tumour microenvironment can help determine which immune suppressive pathways become activated to restrain antitumour immunity. This includes immune checkpoint receptors on effector T-cells and myeloid cells, and release of inhibitory cytokines and metabolites. Therapeutic approaches that target these pathways, particularly immune-checkpoint receptors, can induce durable antitumour responses in patients with advanced-stage cancers, including melanoma. Nevertheless, many patients do not have a good response to monotherapy approaches and alternative strategies are required to achieve optimal therapeutic benefit. These strategies include eliminating the bulk of tumour cells to provoke tumour-antigen release and antigen-presenting cell (APC) function, using adjuvants to enhance APC function, and using agents that enhance effector-cell activity. In this Review, we discuss the stratification of the tumour microenvironment according to tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes and PD-L1 expression in the tumour, and how this stratification enables the design of optimal combination cancer therapies tailored to target different tumor microenvironments.
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Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Organ Donation & Transplant Matters Resources
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Tobacco Smoking and Solid Organ Transplantation : Transplantation

Tobacco Smoking and Solid Organ Transplantation : Transplantation | Immunology and Biotherapies | Scoop.it

This review of the impact of smoking, both by organ donors and by recipients on transplant outcomes is available free online via the journal Transplantation.

 

Smoking,whether it be in the donor population or in the recipient population impacts on outcomes after organ transplantation. Some of these outcomes are specific to the type of organ being transplanted. This is further explored in the article.

 

For eg. In the deceased donor population smoking becomes one of the risk factors that is taken into consideration when an assessment is made of the overall medical suitability for the organs to be used for transplantation.

 

Image via www.nature.com

 


Via Deborah Verran
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