Litcius/Paper detail

Dendritic Cells and Immunogenic Cancer Cell Death: A Combination for Improving Antitumor Immunity

María Julia Lamberti, Annunziata Nigro, Fátima María Mentucci, Natalia Belén Rumie Vittar, Vincenzo Casolaro, Jessica Dal Col

2020Pharmaceutics95 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The safety and feasibility of dendritic cell (DC)-based immunotherapies in cancer management have been well documented after more than twenty-five years of experimentation, and, by now, undeniably accepted. On the other hand, it is equally evident that DC-based vaccination as monotherapy did not achieve the clinical benefits that were predicted in a number of promising preclinical studies. The current availability of several immune modulatory and targeting approaches opens the way to many potential therapeutic combinations. In particular, the evidence that the immune-related effects that are elicited by immunogenic cell death (ICD)-inducing therapies are strictly associated with DC engagement and activation strongly support the combination of ICD-inducing and DC-based immunotherapies. In this review, we examine the data in recent studies employing tumor cells, killed through ICD induction, in the formulation of anticancer DC-based vaccines. In addition, we discuss the opportunity to combine pharmacologic or physical therapeutic approaches that can promote ICD in vivo with in situ DC vaccination.

Topics & Concepts

Immunogenic cell deathDendritic cellImmune systemImmunotherapyVaccinationMedicineCancer immunotherapyImmunologyCancerImmunityCancer researchInternal medicineImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesCAR-T cell therapy researchCancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers