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Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy

Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy

9780199676866
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Description
Patients are beginning to benefit from antibody based, cellular and vaccine approaches that are effective against genetically diverse and therapy-resistance cancers. BCG immunotherapy is now being used as a first line treatment for human bladder cancer and the introduction of prophylactic vaccination against Hepatitis B and HPV cancers is starting to show positive results. Following recent FDA approval for a vaccination against prostate cancer, and optimistic results in clinicaltrials for a vaccine targeting cancer antigens in lung cancer, cancer immunotherapy is now significantly impacting patient clinical management.Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy provides an up-to-date and comprehensive account of cancer immunity and immunotherapy. It discusses our adaptive and innate immunity to cancer, the mechanisms underpinning our immune response, current approaches to cancer immunotherapy, and how tumour and host responses can circumvent effective anti-cancer immunity.The book examines recent results, publications and current areas of interest including immune editing and the specific issues that are affecting the research and development of vaccines, providing insight into how these problems may be overcome, as viewed by world leaders in the field. Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy will appeal to clinicians working in oncology and cancer immunotherapy, and research scientists including PhD and masters students, post-doctoral researchers andsenior investigators.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
86172
9780199676866
9780199676866

Data sheet

Publication date
2014
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
470
Dimensions (mm)
171 x 246
Weight (g)
1076
  • Adaptive T-cell immunity and tumor antigen recognition; Impact of aging and body mass on cancer immunotherapy outcomes; The potential of natural killer cells in cancer immunotherapy; The tumour microenvironment: the role of tumour associated macrophages in cancer progression and responses to therapy; Hard and soft loss of MHC class I expression in cancer cells; Modulation of the adaptive immune system through chronic inflammation and T-regulatory responses; Myeloid-derived suppressor cells: immune suppressive cells that facilitate tumor progression and promote and deter cancer-associated inflammation.; Triggering death receptors as a means of inducing tumoricidal activity; Identification of tumor antigens for clinical evaluation; Viral antigens as targets for prophylactic and therapeutic intervention in cancer; HER-2/neu as a target for vaccine and antibody directed therapies; Pre-clinical evaluation of immunotherapy: the case for prostate cancer and the tramp model; Tumor-associated antigens characterized in a conceptual framework of biology, microenvironment, and therapy; Predictive biomarkers to better select patients for cancer immunotherapy; Viral platforms for expression of tumour antigens in cancer immunotherapy; Translating research into clinical practice: lessons from the immunology and immunotherapy of haemopoietic malignancies; DNA vaccines; Programming the immune system through childhood infections: MUC1 Tumor Associated Antigen (TAA) as a Disease Associated Antigen (DAA); Vaccination against myeloid leukaemias using newly defined antigens; Immune-checkpoint blockade in cancer immunotherapy; Multi-peptide cancer vaccines for clinical application; Adoptive T-cell therapy using TILs for the treatment of metastatic melanoma; Chimeric antigen receptor gene therapy in cancer; The vaccinal effect of monoclonal antibodies in cancer therapy; Antibody therapies: defining appropriate cell surface epitopes for targeting tumours; Adoptive lymphocyte (stem cell) therapy in cancer; Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) and Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT): Tumor Cell Plasticity Challenges Immunotherapy; Immune escape and aging of the immune system compromises the immune response to tumor antigens;
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