DC-based cancer vaccines
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 May 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 117 (5) , 1195-1203
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci31205
Abstract
Because of the large preexisting antigenic load and immunosuppressive environment within a tumor, inducing therapeutically useful antitumor immunity in cancer patients requires the development of powerful vaccination protocols. An approach gaining increasing popularity in the tumor vaccine field is to immunize cancer patients with their own DCs loaded ex vivo with tumor antigens. The underlying premise of this approach is that the efficiency and control over the vaccination process provided by ex vivo manipulation of the DCs generates an optimally potent APC and a superior method for stimulating antitumor immunity in vivo compared with the more conventional direct vaccination methods, offsetting the added cost and complexity associated with this form of customized cell therapy.Keywords
This publication has 107 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adjuvant-Enhanced Antibody Responses in the Absence of Toll-Like Receptor SignalingScience, 2006
- Expansion of FOXP3high regulatory T cells by human dendritic cells (DCs) in vitro and after injection of cytokine-matured DCs in myeloma patientsBlood, 2006
- On regulation of phagosome maturation and antigen presentationNature Immunology, 2006
- Direct stimulation of T cells by membrane vesicles from antigen-presenting cellsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Immune regulation in tumor-bearing hostsCurrent Opinion in Immunology, 2006
- Pathogen Recognition and Innate ImmunityCell, 2006
- Checkpoint Blockade in Cancer ImmunotherapyPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Therapeutic vaccination with papillomavirus E6 and E7 long peptides results in the control of both established virus-induced lesions and latently infected sites in a pre-clinical cottontail rabbit papillomavirus modelVaccine, 2005
- Toll-like receptor control of the adaptive immune responsesNature Immunology, 2004
- The promise of cancer vaccinesNature Reviews Cancer, 2004