Litcius/Paper detail

The Impact of Infused Autograft Absolute Numbers of Immune Effector Cells on Survival Post-Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation

Luis F. Porrata

2022Cells10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autologous stem cell transplantation treatment has been viewed as a therapeutic modality to enable the infusion of higher doses of chemotherapy to eradicate tumor cells. Nevertheless, recent reports have shown that, in addition to stem cells, infusion of autograft immune effector cells produces an autologous graft-versus-tumor effect, similar to the graft-versus-tumor effect observed in allogeneic-stem cell transplantation, but without the clinical complications of graft-versus-host disease. In this review, I assess the impact on clinical outcomes following infusions of autograft-antigen presenting cells, autograft innate and adaptive immune effector cells, and autograft immunosuppressive cells during autologous stem cell transplantation. This article is intended to provide a platform to change the current paradigmatic view of autologous stem cell transplantation, from a high-dose chemotherapy-based treatment to an adoptive immunotherapeutic intervention.

Topics & Concepts

Stem cellTransplantationMedicineImmune systemChemotherapyImmunotherapyEffectorImmunologyCancer researchSurgeryBiologyCell biologyCAR-T cell therapy researchHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationImmunotherapy and Immune Responses