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Immune Suppression in Pregnancy and Cancer: Parallels and Insights

Irina Kareva

2020Translational Oncology45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Immune system has evolved to maintain homeostatic balance between effector and regulatory immunity, which is critical to both elicit an adequate protective response to fight pathogens and disease, such as cancer, and to prevent damage to healthy tissues. Transient immune suppression can occur under normal physiological conditions, such as during wound healing to enable repair of normal tissue, or for more extended periods of time during fetal development, where the balance is shifted towards regulatory immunity to prevent fetal rejection. Interestingly, tumors can exhibit patterns of immune suppression very similar to those observed during fetal development. Here some of the key aspects of normal patterns of immune suppression during pregnancy are reviewed, followed by a discussion of parallels that exist with tumor-related immune suppression and consequent potential therapeutic implications.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemImmunityFetusImmunologyPregnancyEffectorCancerDiseaseHomeostasisBiologyMedicinePathologyCell biologyGeneticsReproductive System and PregnancyEndometriosis Research and TreatmentCOVID-19 Impact on Reproduction