- Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy, in medicine, refers to an array of treatment strategies based upon the concept of modulating the
immune system to achieve a prophylactic and/or therapeutic goal.Activation
Cancer
Cancer immunotherapy attempts to stimulate theimmune system to reject and destroy tumors. BCG immunotherapy for early stage (non-invasive)bladder cancer utilizes "instillation" of attenuated live bacteria into the bladder, and is effective in preventing recurrence in up to two thirds of cases. Topical immunotherapy utilizes an immune enhancement cream (imiquimod ) which is an interferon producer causing the patients own killer T cells to destroy warts, actinic keratoses, basal cell cancer, squamous cell cancer, cutaneous lymphoma, and superficial malignant melanoma. Injection immunotherapy uses mumps, candida or trichophytin antigen injections to treat warts (HPV induced tumors).Dendritic cell based immunotherapy
This utilizes
dendritic cells to activate acytotoxic response towards anantigen . Dendritic cells, anantigen presenting cell , are harvested from a patient. These cells are then either pulsed with an antigen or transfected with aviral vector . The activated dendritic cells are then placed back into the patient; these cells then present the antigens to effector lymphocytes (CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, and in specialized dendritic cells, B cells also). This initiates a cytotoxic response to occur against these antigens and anything that may present these antigens. One use for this therapy is in cancer immunotherapy. Tumor Antigens are presented to dendritic cells, which cause the immune system to target these antigens, which are often expressed on cancerous cells.T cell based adoptive immunotherapy
This therapy uses T cell-based cytotoxic responses to attack cancer. In brief, T cells that have a natural or genetically engineered reactivity to a patients' cancer are expanded "in vitro" using a variety of means and then adoptively transferred into a cancer patient. T cells with a natural occurring reactivity to a patient’s cancer can be found infiltrated in the patients' own tumors. The tumor is harvested, and these tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are expanded "in vitro" using high concentrations of interluekin-2 (IL-2), anti-CD3 and allo-reactive feeders. These T cells are then transferred back into the patient along with exogenous administration of IL-2. Thus far, a 51% objective response rate has been observed; in some patients, tumors shrank to indetectable size. In the case of engineered T cells, T cell receptors (TCR) that have been identified to have reactivity against tumor associated antigens are cloned into a replication incompetent virus that is capable of genomic integration. A patients own lymphocytes are exposed to these viruses and then expanded non-specifically or stimulated using the engineered TCR. The cells are then transferred back into the patient. This therapy has been demonstrated to result in objective clinical responses in patients with refractory stage IV cancer. The Surgery Branch of the National Cancer Institute (Bethesda, Maryland) is actively investigating this form of cancer treatment for patients suffering aggressive melanomas.
Vaccination
Anti-microbial immunotherapy, which includesvaccination , involves activating theimmune system to respond to an infectious agent.uppression
Immune suppression dampens an abnormalimmune response inautoimmune diseases or reduces a normalimmune response to prevent rejection of transplanted organs or cells.Immune tolerance
Immune tolerance is the process by which the body naturally does not launch an immune system attack on its own tissues. Immune tolerance therapies seeks to reset the immune system so that the body stops mistakenly attacking its own organs or cells inautoimmune disease or accepts foreign tissue inorgan transplant ation.cite journal |author=Rotrosen D, Matthews JB, Bluestone JA |title=The immune tolerance network: a new paradigm for developing tolerance-inducing therapies |journal=J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. |volume=110 |issue=1 |pages=17–23 |year=2002 |pmid=12110811|doi=10.1067/mai.2002.124258] A brief treatment should then reduce or eliminate the need for life-long immunosuppression and the chances of attendant side effects, in the case of transplantation, or preserve the body's own function, at least in part, in cases of type 1 diabetes or other autoimmune disorders.Allergies
Immunotherapy is also used to treat allergies. While other allergy treatments (such as
antihistamine s orcorticosteroids ) treat only the symptoms of allergic disease, immunotherapy is the only available treatment that can modify the natural course of the allergic disease, by reducing sensitivity toallergen s.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.