Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanisms of Immunosuppressive Tumor Evasion: Focus on Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Silvia Jiménez‐Morales, Iván Sammir Aranda-Uribe, Carlos Jhovani Pérez-Amado, Julián Ramírez‐Bello, Alfredo Hidalgo‐Miranda

2021Frontiers in Immunology39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a malignancy with high heterogeneity in its biological features and treatments. Although the overall survival (OS) of patients with ALL has recently improved considerably, owing to the application of conventional chemo-therapeutic agents, approximately 20% of the pediatric cases and 40-50% of the adult patients relapse during and after the treatment period. The potential mechanisms that cause relapse involve clonal evolution, innate and acquired chemoresistance, and the ability of ALL cells to escape the immune-suppressive tumor response. Currently, immunotherapy in combination with conventional treatment is used to enhance the immune response against tumor cells, thereby significantly improving the OS in patients with ALL. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms of immune evasion by leukemia cells could be useful for developing novel therapeutic strategies.

Topics & Concepts

Evasion (ethics)Lymphoblastic LeukemiaImmune systemImmunotherapyMedicineMalignancyImmunologyLeukemiaCancer researchInternal medicineImmune Cell Function and InteractionHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationCAR-T cell therapy research