Search results for " cancer vaccines"

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Immunotherapy for recurrent ovarian cancer: a further piece of the puzzle or a striking strategy?

2014

Introduction: Treatment of ovarian cancer has been long standardized with the inclusion of surgery and chemotherapy based on platinum and taxanes, this strategy reaching high remission rates. However, when this treatment fails, further options are available with little benefit. Since ovarian cancer has specific immunologic features, actually immunotherapy is under evalua- 15 tion to overcome treatment failure in patients experiencing recurrence. Areas covered: Immunogenicity of ovarian cancer and its relationship with clinical outcomes is briefly reviewed. The kinds of immunotherapeutic strategies are summarized. The clinical trials investigating immunotherapy in recurrent ovarian cancer pa…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/06 - Oncologia Medicamedicine.medical_treatmentClinical BiochemistryTreatment failureInternal medicineDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansIn patientTreatment FailureBiologyOvarian Neoplasmsantibody cancer vaccines cell transfer immune system immunotherapy ovarian cancer recurrence treatment strategiesPharmacologyChemotherapybusiness.industryTreatment optionsImmunotherapymedicine.diseaseClinical trialRecurrent Ovarian CancerImmunologyFemaleImmunotherapyHuman medicineNeoplasm Recurrence LocalOvarian cancerbusinessEngineering sciences. TechnologyExpert Opinion on Biological Therapy
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“MIATA”—Minimal Information about T Cell Assays

2009

Immunotherapy, especially therapeutic vaccination, has a great deal of potential in the treatment of cancer and certain infectious diseases such as HIV (Allison et al., 2006; Fauci et al., 2008; Feldmann and Steinman, 2005). Numerous vaccine candidates have been tested in patients with a variety of tumor types and chronic viral diseases. Often, the best way to assess the clinical potential of these vaccines is to monitor the induced T cell response, and yet there are currently no standards for reporting these results. This letter is an effort to address this problem.

T-LymphocytesT cellmedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)medicine.disease_causeT cell responseCancer VaccinesArticleMonitoring ImmunologicNeoplasmsmedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyIn patientImmunoassaybusiness.industryViral VaccineCancerViral VaccinesImmunotherapymedicine.diseaseVaccinationInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureVirus DiseasesPractice Guidelines as TopicImmunologyImmunotherapybusinessCancer Vaccines/immunology; Cancer Vaccines/therapeutic use; Humans; Immunoassay/standards; Immunotherapy; Monitoring Immunologic/standards; Neoplasms/therapy; Practice Guidelines as Topic/standards; T-Lymphocytes/immunology; Viral Vaccines/immunology; Viral Vaccines/therapeutic use; Virus Diseases/therapyImmunity
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