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Emergence of immunotherapy as a novel way to treat hepatocellular carcinoma 被引量:13

Emergence of immunotherapy as a novel way to treat hepatocellular carcinoma
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摘要 Tumor immunity proceeds through multiple processes, which consist of antigen presentation by antigen presenting cells(APCs) to educate effector cells and destruction by the effector cytotoxic cells. However, tumor immunity is frequently repressed at tumor sites. Malignantly transformed cells rarely survive the attack by the immune system, but cells that do survive change their phenotypes to reduce their immunogenicity. The resultant cells evade the attack by the immune system and form clinically discernible tumors. Tumor microenvironments simultaneously contain a wide variety of immune suppressive molecules and cells to dampen tumor immunity. Moreover, the liver microenvironment exhibits immune tolerance to reduce aberrant immune responses to massively-exposed antigens via the portal vein, and immune dysfunction is frequently associated with liver cirrhosis, which is widespread in hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC) patients. Immune therapy aims to reduce tumor burden, but it is also expected to prevent non-cancerous liver lesions from progressing to HCC, because HCC develops or recurs from noncancerous liver lesions with chronic inflammatory states and/or cirrhosis and these lesions cannot be cured and/or eradicated by local and/or systemic therapies. Nevertheless, cancer immune therapy should augment specific tumor immunity by using two distinct measures: enhancing the effector cell functions such as antigen presentation capacity of APCs and tumor cell killing capacity of cytotoxic cells, and reactivating the immune system in immune-suppressive tumor microenvironments. Here, we will summarize the current status and discuss the future perspective on immune therapy for HCC. Tumor immunity proceeds through multiple processes, which consist of antigen presentation by antigen presenting cells(APCs) to educate effector cells and destruction by the effector cytotoxic cells. However, tumor immunity is frequently repressed at tumor sites. Malignantly transformed cells rarely survive the attack by the immune system, but cells that do survive change their phenotypes to reduce their immunogenicity. The resultant cells evade the attack by the immune system and form clinically discernible tumors. Tumor microenvironments simultaneously contain a wide variety of immune suppressive molecules and cells to dampen tumor immunity. Moreover, the liver microenvironment exhibits immune tolerance to reduce aberrant immune responses to massively-exposed antigens via the portal vein, and immune dysfunction is frequently associated with liver cirrhosis, which is widespread in hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC) patients. Immune therapy aims to reduce tumor burden, but it is also expected to prevent non-cancerous liver lesions from progressing to HCC, because HCC develops or recurs from noncancerous liver lesions with chronic inflammatory states and/or cirrhosis and these lesions cannot be cured and/or eradicated by local and/or systemic therapies. Nevertheless, cancer immune therapy should augment specific tumor immunity by using two distinct measures: enhancing the effector cell functions such as antigen presentation capacity of APCs and tumor cell killing capacity of cytotoxic cells, and reactivating the immune system in immune-suppressive tumor microenvironments. Here, we will summarize the current status and discuss the future perspective on immune therapy for HCC.
出处 《World Journal of Gastroenterology》 SCIE CAS 2018年第17期1839-1858,共20页 世界胃肠病学杂志(英文版)
基金 Supported by(in part)Research Programs on the Innovative Development and Application for New Drugs for Hepatitis B(No.17fk0310116h0001) from the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development(AMED) Extramural Collaborative Research Grant of Cancer Research Institute,Kanazawa University
关键词 NATURAL KILLER T CELL NATURAL KILLER CELL chimeric ANTIGEN RECEPTOR T CELL T CELL RECEPTOR cytokine-induced KILLER CELL program death-1 cytotoxic LYMPHOCYTE antigen-4 regulatory T CELL dendritic CELL myeloid-derived suppressor CELL PD-ligand 1 peptide vaccine tumor-associated ANTIGEN tumor infiltrating LYMPHOCYTE Natural killer T cell Natural killer cell Chimeric antigen receptor T cell T cell receptor Cytokine-induced killer cell Program death-1 Cytotoxic lymphocyte antigen-4 Regulatory T cell Dendritic cell Myeloid-derived suppressor cell PD-ligand 1 Peptide vaccine Tumor-associated antigen Tumor infiltrating lymphocyte
作者简介 Correspondence to:Naofumi Mukaida,MD,PhD,Professor,Division of Molecular Bioregulation,Cancer Research Institute,Kanazawa University,Kakuma-machi,Ishikawa,Kanazawa 920-1192,Japan.mukaida@staff.kanazawa-u.ac.jp.Telephone:+81-76-2646735,Fax:+81-76-2344520.
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