Antiangiogenic Agents Can Increase Lymphocyte Infiltration into Tumor and Enhance the Effectiveness of Adoptive Immunotherapy of Cancer
National Cancer Institute · Center for Cancer Research
Abstract
Adoptive cell transfer (ACT)-based immunotherapies can mediate objective cancer regression in animal models and in up to 70% of patients with metastatic melanoma; however, it remains unclear whether the tumor vasculature impedes the egress of tumor-specific T cells, thus hindering this immunotherapy. Disruption of the proangiogenic interaction of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) with its receptor (VEGFR-2) has been reported to "normalize" tumor vasculature, enhancing the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents by increasing their delivery to the tumor intersitium. We thus sought to determine whether disrupting VEGF/VEGFR-2 signaling could enhance the effectiveness of ACT in a murine cancer model. The…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
6- RSRajeev ShrimaliCorresponding
National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
- ZYZhiya Yu
National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
- MRMarc R. Theoret
National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
- DCDhanalakshmi Chinnasamy
National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
- NPNicholas P. Restifo
National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Extravasation
- Adoptive cell transfer
- Immunotherapy
- Cancer research
- Melanoma
- Cancer immunotherapy
- Cancer
- Good health and well-being