نتایج جستجو برای: tumor vaccines

تعداد نتایج: 475750  

Journal: :Current opinion in biotechnology 1997
T Ben-Yedidia R Arnon

Advances have been made in the development of vaccines based on synthetic peptides and polypeptides representing tumor-associated antigens and protective epitopes of viruses and parasites. Advances within the past year include the design of vaccines based on artificial proteins, for example multiantigen peptides, branched polypeptides, fusion and recombinant peptides, as well as single T cell e...

Journal: :Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology 1996
M Sznol H Zwierzina

Both antibody-mediated and cell-mediated immuno-logic responses may play a role in prevention and treatment of neoplastic disease. Passive transfer of mono-clonal antibodies or activated lymphocytes have produced tumor regression in animal models and in patients with advanced malignancies. However, these approaches are invariably expensive and often cumbersome , and efficacy has been limited. T...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2008
David J Betting Kamran Kafi Alireza Abdollahi-Fard Sara A Hurvitz John M Timmerman

Therapeutic vaccination of B cell lymphoma patients with tumor-specific Ig (idiotype, or Id) chemically coupled to the immunogenic foreign carrier protein keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) using glutaraldehyde has shown promising results in early clinical trials, and phase III trials are underway. However, glutaraldehyde Id-KLH vaccines fail to elicit anti-Id immune and clinical responses in many...

2006
Ralph A. Reisfeld

Two novel oral DNA-based vaccines provide immune protection against breast cancer in mouse model systems. These vaccines are delivered by attenuated Salmonella typhimurium to secondary lymphoid organs and are directed against novel targets such as transcription factor Fos-related antigen 1 (Fra-1) and endoglin (CD105). Both vaccines elicit suppression of angiogenesis in the breast tumor vascula...

Journal: :Cancer immunology research 2015
Brian T Rekoske Heath A Smith Brian M Olson Brett B Maricque Douglas G McNeel

DNA vaccines have demonstrated antitumor efficacy in multiple preclinical models, but low immunogenicity has been observed in several human clinical trials. This has led to many approaches seeking to improve the immunogenicity of DNA vaccines. We previously reported that a DNA vaccine encoding the cancer-testis antigen SSX2, modified to encode altered epitopes with increased MHC class I affinit...

2003
Mary L. Disis Lupe G. Salazar

Advances in basic immunology over the past decade have changed the scope and application of cancer vaccines. Perhaps the most important advance is the demonstration that human tumors are immunogenic and the identification of tumor-specific antigens. In fact, dozens of immunogenic proteins have been identified in patients with cancer using high throughput technologies. More importantly, we have ...

Journal: :Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics 2012
Andrés A Herrada Nicole Rojas-Colonelli Paula González-Figueroa Jonathan Roco César Oyarce Maarten A Ligtenberg Alvaro Lladser

DNA vaccines have emerged as an attractive strategy to promote protective cellular and humoral immunity against the encoded antigen. DNA vaccines are easy to generate, inexpensive to produce and purify at large-scale, highly stable and safe. In addition, plasmids used for DNA vaccines act as powerful "danger signals" by stimulating several DNA-sensing innate immune receptors that promote the in...

2012
Fabian Benencia Leslee Sprague John McGinty Michelle Pate Maria Muccioli

Many clinical trials have been carried out or are in progress to assess the therapeutic potential of dendritic-cell- (DC-) based vaccines on cancer patients, and recently the first DC-based vaccine for human cancer was approved by the FDA. Herewith, we describe the general characteristics of DCs and different strategies to generate effective antitumor DC vaccines. In recent years, the relevance...

2013
Jonathan D. Buhrman Kimberly R. Jordan Daniel J. Munson Brandon L. Moore John W. Kappler Jill E. Slansky

Vaccines that incorporate peptide mimics of tumor antigens, or mimotope vaccines, are commonly used in cancer immunotherapy and function by eliciting increased numbers of T cells that cross-react with the native tumor antigen. Unfortunately, they often elicit T cells that do not cross-react with or that have low affinity for the tumor antigen. Using a high affinity tumor-specific T cell clone, ...

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