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Glioblastoma Immune Landscape and the Potential of New Immunotherapies

Thomas Daubon, Audrey Hémadou, Irati Romero‐Garmendia, Maya Saleh

2020Frontiers in Immunology107 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) are the most common tumors of the central nervous system and among the deadliest cancers in adults. GBM overall survival has not improved over the last decade despite optimization of therapeutic standard-of-care. While immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) have revolutionized cancer care, they unfortunately have little therapeutic success in GBM. Here, we elaborate on normal brain and GBM-associated immune landscapes. We describe the role of microglia and tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in immune suppression and highlight the impact of energy metabolism in immune evasion. We also describe the challenges and opportunities of immunotherapies in GBM and discuss new avenues based on harnessing the anti-tumor activity of myeloid cells, vaccines, chimeric antigen receptors (CAR)-T and -NK cells, oncolytic viruses, nanocarriers, and combination therapies.

Topics & Concepts

Oncolytic virusImmune systemChimeric antigen receptorImmunotherapyMicrogliaGlioblastomaImmune checkpointMedicineMyeloid cellsCancerEvasion (ethics)VirotherapyCancer researchImmunologyMass cytometryImmunosurveillanceBiologyInflammationInternal medicineGeneBiochemistryPhenotypeImmune cells in cancerGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms
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