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Immunosenescence, inflammaging, and cancer immunotherapy efficacy

Julieta Rodriguez, Marie Naigeon, Vincent Goldschmidt, Matthieu Roulleaux Dugage, Lauren Seknazi, François Xavier Danlos, Stéphane Champiat, Aurélien Marabelle, Jean‐Marie Michot, Christophe Massard, Benjamin Besse, Roberto Ferrara, Nathalie Chaput, Capucine Baldini

2022Expert Review of Anticancer Therapy53 citationsDOI

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Immunosenescence is a progressive remodeling of immune functions associated with a decreased ability of the immune system to set up an efficient immune response, both innate and adaptive, with an increase of highly differentiated T cells at the expense of naive T cells. The incidence and prevalence of most cancers increase with age, which can partly be explained by tumor escape mechanisms and decreased immunosurveillance. Aging is also associated with inflammaging, a low-grade proinflammatory state characterized by an increase in inflammatory mediators. Anti-cancer immunotherapy has profoundly changed the landscape of oncology therapy in the last 10 years. Modern T-cell targeted therapies such as bispecific T cell engagers, CAR-T cells, or immune checkpoint blockers may be theoretically affected by immunosenescence or inflammaging. AREAS COVERED: A bibliographic review through PubMed and Embase was carried out using the following search terms: 'immunosenescence,' 'immunotherapy,' 'inflammaging,' 'bispecific antibodies,' 'CAR-T cells,' 'immune checkpoint blockers,' and 'older patients.' EXPERT OPINION: This review explores the potential impact of immunosenescence and inflammaging on anti-cancer immunotherapy and therapeutic strategies that could counter immune senescence. A more dedicated research on immunosenescence biomarkers in future clinical trials is warranted for the development of new, more effective and safer therapies.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunosenescenceMedicineImmunosurveillanceImmunotherapyImmune systemImmunologyCancer immunotherapyImmune checkpointCancerT cellOncologyInternal medicineCAR-T cell therapy researchCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersTelomeres, Telomerase, and Senescence
Immunosenescence, inflammaging, and cancer immunotherapy efficacy | Litcius