AI Article Synopsis

  • Tumor ablation techniques like radiotherapy and thermal ablation effectively destroy tumors but leave behind debris that can trigger immune responses, leading to the idea of cancer vaccination.
  • While these techniques yield modest immune responses on their own, tumors have developed ways to suppress immunity in their environment, making it necessary to use additional immune-stimulating strategies.
  • New advancements in multifunctional antibodies offer promising ways to enhance the immune response by targeting specific areas and reducing side effects, potentially improving cancer treatment when combined with tumor ablation.

Article Abstract

tumor ablation techniques, like radiotherapy, cryo- and heat-based thermal ablation are successfully applied in oncology for local destruction of tumor masses. Although diverse in technology and mechanism of inducing cell death, ablative techniques share one key feature: they generate tumor debris which remains . This tumor debris functions as an unbiased source of tumor antigens available to the immune system and has led to the concept of cancer vaccination. Most studies, however, report generally modest tumor-directed immune responses following local tumor ablation as stand-alone treatment. Tumors have evolved mechanisms to create an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME), parts of which may admix with the antigen depot. Provision of immune stimuli, as well as approaches that counteract the immunosuppressive TME, have shown to be key to boost ablation-induced anti-tumor immunity. Recent advances in protein engineering have yielded novel multifunctional antibody formats. These multifunctional antibodies can provide a combination of distinct effector functions or allow for delivery of immunomodulators specifically to the relevant locations, thereby mitigating potential toxic side effects. This review provides an update on immune activation strategies that have been tested to act in concert with tumor debris to achieve cancer vaccination. We further provide a rationale for multifunctional antibody formats to be applied together with ablation to boost anti-tumor immunity for local and systemic tumor control.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8079760PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.617365DOI Listing

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