1.An overview of antibody-based cancer therapy.
Qing-fang MIAO ; Rong-guang SHAO ; Yong-su ZHEN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2012;47(10):1261-1268
The use of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) for cancer therapy has achieved considerable success in recent years. Approximate 17 monoclonal antibodies have been approved as cancer therapeutics since 1997. Antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) are powerful new treatment options for cancer, and naked antibodies have recently achieved remarkable success. The safety and effectiveness of therapeutic mAbs in oncology vary depending on the nature of the target antigen and the mechanisms of tumor cell killing. This review provides a summary of the current state of antibody-based cancer therapy, including the mechanisms of tumor cell killing by antibodies, tumor antigens as antibody targets, clinical effectiveness of antibodies in cancer patients and nanoparticles-based ADCs.
Antibodies, Monoclonal
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immunology
;
therapeutic use
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Antigens, Neoplasm
;
immunology
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Antineoplastic Agents
;
therapeutic use
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Humans
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Immunoconjugates
;
therapeutic use
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Nanoparticles
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Neoplasms
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immunology
;
therapy
3.NY-ESO-1 and cancer immunotherapy.
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2008;30(4):371-377
NY-ESO-1 is an important member of cancer-testis antigen family and is widely distributed among many cancer types. As a tumor-specific antigen with the strongest immunogenicity so far identified, it can induce spontaneous antibody and T-cell responses in patients with NY-ESO-1-positive tumors. Therefore, it has been a good vaccine candidate in the immunotherapy against many malignancies. This article reviews the recent research advances in NY-ESO-1 and its relevant vaccines.
Antigens, Neoplasm
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genetics
;
immunology
;
therapeutic use
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Cancer Vaccines
;
immunology
;
therapeutic use
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Clinical Trials as Topic
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Humans
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Immunotherapy
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Membrane Proteins
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genetics
;
immunology
;
therapeutic use
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Neoplasms
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genetics
;
immunology
;
therapy
4.Advances in the study of antitumor vaccines with tumor-associated carbohydrate antigen.
Wei DI ; Lin WANG ; Tao PENG ; Sheng-Qi WANG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2005;40(7):591-599
Adjuvants, Immunologic
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biosynthesis
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therapeutic use
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Animals
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Antigen Presentation
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immunology
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Antigens, Neoplasm
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metabolism
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Antigens, Tumor-Associated, Carbohydrate
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biosynthesis
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immunology
;
therapeutic use
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Cancer Vaccines
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Humans
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Neoplasms
;
immunology
;
therapy
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Vaccines, Synthetic
5.Clinical features and prognosis of childhood B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia expressing the PRAME gene.
Feng ZHANG ; Ai-Dong LU ; Ying-Xi ZUO ; Ming-Ming DING ; Yue-Ping JIA ; Le-Ping ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2022;24(5):543-549
OBJECTIVES:
To study the clinical and prognostic significance of the preferentially expressed antigen of melanoma (PRAME) gene in the absence of specific fusion gene expression in children with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL).
METHODS:
A total of 167 children newly diagnosed with B-ALL were enrolled, among whom 70 were positive for the PRAME gene and 97 were negative. None of the children were positive for MLL-r, BCR/ABL, E2A/PBX1, or ETV6/RUNX1. The PRAME positive and negative groups were analyzed in terms of clinical features, prognosis, and related prognostic factors.
RESULTS:
Compared with the PRAME negative group, the PRAME positive group had a significantly higher proportion of children with the liver extending >6 cm below the costal margin (P<0.05). There was a significant reduction in the PRAME copy number after induction chemotherapy (P<0.05). In the minimal residual disease (MRD) positive group after induction chemotherapy, the PRAME copy number was not correlated with the MRD level (P>0.05). In the MRD negative group, there was also no correlation between them (P>0.05). The PRAME positive group had a significantly higher 4-year event-free survival rate than the PRAME negative group (87.5%±4.6% vs 73.5%±4.6%, P<0.05), while there was no significant difference between the two groups in the 4-year overall survival rate (88.0%±4.4% vs 85.3%±3.8%, P>0.05). The Cox proportional-hazards regression model analysis showed that positive PRAME expression was a protective factor for event-free survival rate in children with B-ALL (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Although the PRAME gene cannot be monitored as MRD, overexpression of PRAME suggests a good prognosis in B-ALL.
Acute Disease
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Antigens, Neoplasm/therapeutic use*
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Child
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Humans
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Neoplasm, Residual/diagnosis*
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Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma/genetics*
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Prognosis
6.Prognostic impact of epithelial cell adhesion molecule in ovarian cancer patients.
Journal of Gynecologic Oncology 2014;25(4):352-354
No abstract available.
Antigens, Neoplasm/*metabolism
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Antineoplastic Agents/*therapeutic use
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Cell Adhesion Molecules/*metabolism
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Female
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Humans
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Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial/*diagnosis
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Organoplatinum Compounds/*therapeutic use
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Ovarian Neoplasms/*diagnosis
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Tumor Markers, Biological/*metabolism
7.Heat shock protein gp96 and cancer immunotherapy.
Yue PEIBIN ; Yang SHUDE ; Huang CHANGZHI
Chinese Medical Sciences Journal 2002;17(4):251-256
Heat shock protein gp96 is a highly conserved and monomorphic glycoprotein in the endoplasmic reticulum. It functions as molecular chaperone and can associate with a variety of antigenic peptides noncovalently in vivo and in vitro. Recent studies have indicated that gp96 molecules participate in major histocompatibility complex class I-restricted antigen presentation pathway. Immunization of mice with gp96 preparations isolated from cancer cells can elicit a cancer-specific protective T cell immune response that is recallable, which is a prerequisite for gp96 as a therapeutic vaccine against cancers. The immunogenicity of gp96 molecules has been attributed to the antigenic peptides associated with them. These phenomena provide a new pathway for cancer immunotherapy. The mechanism that the gp96-peptide complex induces specific immune response and the explorations for gp96-peptide complex as a therapeutic cancer vaccine are reviewed.
Animals
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Antigens, Neoplasm
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immunology
;
therapeutic use
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Cancer Vaccines
;
therapeutic use
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Humans
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Immunotherapy
;
Membrane Glycoproteins
;
immunology
;
metabolism
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Molecular Chaperones
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immunology
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Neoplasms
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immunology
;
therapy
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Peptides
;
immunology
;
metabolism
8.Progress in the study of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors as potential anticancer drugs.
Jia GUO ; Feng-ran LI ; Yang LIU ; Mao-sheng CHENG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2013;48(11):1637-1643
Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) is a tumor associated protein which is able to be a potent anticancer target, since it is highly expressed in a multitude of carcinomas, while it is present in a limited number of normal tissues. This review focuses on its role in tumor physiology, the most recent three dimensional structure features of this enzyme which has recently been elucidated. In addition, we present recent advances in the development of small inhibitors able to target CA IX for therapeutic applications.
Antigens, Neoplasm
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metabolism
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Antineoplastic Agents
;
chemistry
;
therapeutic use
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Carbonic Anhydrase IX
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Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors
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chemistry
;
therapeutic use
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Carbonic Anhydrases
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metabolism
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Humans
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Neoplasms
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drug therapy
;
enzymology
9.Recent Progress of Nano-drug Combined with Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cell Therapy in the Treatment of Soild Tumors.
Yi LIU ; Ning LI ; Wenyang JIANG ; Qing GENG
Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer 2023;26(1):59-65
Chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy has shown remarkable success in treating hematological malignancies. However, CAR-T therapy for solid tumors is still limited due to the unique solid-tumor microenvironment and heterogeneous target antigen expression, which leads to an urgent need of combining other therapies. At present, nano delivery system has become one of the most promising directions for the development of anti-tumor drugs. Based on the background of CAR-T and tumor treatment, we focus on the research progress of nanomedicine combined with CAR-T therapy, and systematically review the strategies and examples in recent years in the aspects of in vivo delivery of mRNA, regulation of tumor microenvironment, combination with photothermal therapy. And we also look forward to the future direction of this filed.
.
Humans
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Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/therapeutic use*
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Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism*
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Antigens, Neoplasm/metabolism*
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Lung Neoplasms/metabolism*
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Neoplasms/metabolism*
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T-Lymphocytes
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Tumor Microenvironment
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Nanoparticles/therapeutic use*
10.Effectiveness and Mechanism of Decitabine Maintenance Therapy in Patients with Medium and Low-risk Acute Myeloid Leukemia.
Yi DONG ; Jia WANG ; Qian-Shan TAO ; Yuan-Yuan SHEN ; Zhi-Min ZHAI
Journal of Experimental Hematology 2022;30(5):1369-1375
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the efficacy and mechanism of decitabine maintenance therapy in patients with medium and low-risk acute myeloid leukemia(AML).
METHODS:
The newly diagnosed medium- and low-risk AML patients in the Second Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University from December 2016 to December 2020 were retrospectively analyzed. Seventy-eight AML patients who were still in remission after consolidation treatment were divided into maintenance treatment group (31 cases) and control group (47 cases). The maintenance treatment patients received decitabine at 20 mg/m2 IV daily for 5 days, every three months for 6 cycles, the control group was only observed and tested regularly. Follow-up was completed by telephone or by viewing outpatient or inpatient medical records. Primary indicators were overall survival (OS), and secondary indicators include relapse-free survival (RFS), tolerance, cellular immune function and analysis of risk factors related to survival.
RESULTS:
Median RFS in maintenance theatment and control groups was 30.1(26.2-33.8) months and 24.3(21.7-30.3) months (P=0.011), median OS 34.7(29.8-39.7) months and 27.7(24.1-31.3) months respectively(P=0.024), with a statistically significant difference. For the univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis, only the minimal residual disease (HR=25.185, P<0.001) and the treatment methods (HR=0.124, P<0.001) affected the PFS and OS of patients. In the maintenance treatment group, CD3+T cells, CD8+T cells and NK cells increased significantly after decitabine maintenance treatment, and the regulatory T cells decreased significantly (P<0.05). Patients had a low incidence of grade 3-4 adverse events, hematological adverse events were mainly neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, non-hematological adverse events were mainly digestive tract symptoms, and the patient was well tolerated.
CONCLUSION
Maintenance treatment with decitabine provided benefit survival in patients with medium- and low-risk AML and is well tolerated. The mechanism may be inhibition the proliferation of regulatory T cells, induce and enhance the cytotoxic effect of CD8+ T cells on tumor antigens.
Antigens, Neoplasm
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Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use*
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CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes
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Decitabine/therapeutic use*
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Humans
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Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute/drug therapy*
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Retrospective Studies
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Treatment Outcome