Litcius/Paper detail

T-Cell Cancer after CAR T-Cell Therapy

Emily Mitchell, George S. Vassiliou

2024New England Journal of Medicine16 citationsDOI

Abstract

The last three decades have seen dramatic advances in the use of immunotherapies to treat cancer, primarily in the form of monoclonal antibodies targeting cancer cells directly or recruiting the immune system against them. More recently, immune cells themselves are being used as anticancer treatments, led by chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, genetically modified autologous T cells that are manufactured to express a CAR gene. CAR genes are engineered to code for a transmembrane protein with an extracellular antigen recognition and intracellular T-cell–activating domains that enable CAR T cells to recognize and attack cancer cells that express its target . . .

Topics & Concepts

CancerCellMedicineInternal medicineBiologyGeneticsCAR-T cell therapy researchVirus-based gene therapy researchViral Infectious Diseases and Gene Expression in Insects
T-Cell Cancer after CAR T-Cell Therapy | Litcius