Cancer vaccines: between the idea and the reality

OJ Finn - Nature Reviews Immunology, 2003 - nature.com
OJ Finn
Nature Reviews Immunology, 2003nature.com
Whether vaccines are designed to prepare the immune system for the encounter with a
pathogen or with cancer, certain common challenges need to be faced, such as what
antigen and what adjuvant to use, what type of immune response to generate and how to
make it long lasting. Cancer, additionally, presents several unique hurdles. Cancer vaccines
must overcome immune suppression exerted by the tumour, by previous therapy or by the
effects of advanced age of the patient. If used for cancer prevention, vaccines must elicit …
Abstract
Whether vaccines are designed to prepare the immune system for the encounter with a pathogen or with cancer, certain common challenges need to be faced, such as what antigen and what adjuvant to use, what type of immune response to generate and how to make it long lasting. Cancer, additionally, presents several unique hurdles. Cancer vaccines must overcome immune suppression exerted by the tumour, by previous therapy or by the effects of advanced age of the patient. If used for cancer prevention, vaccines must elicit effective long-term memory without the potential of causing autoimmunity. This article addresses the common and the unique challenges to cancer vaccines and the progress that has been made in meeting them. Considering how refractory cancer has been to standard therapy, efforts to achieve immune control of this disease are well justified.
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