City
Epaper

Researchers find way to make immunotherapy work for lymphoma

By IANS | Updated: August 2, 2019 14:40 IST

Researchers have developed a novel way to use immunotherapy drugs against lymphoma by combining them with stem cell transplantation.

Open in App

The study, published in Cancer Discovery journal, found that this new process is not only effective in lymphoma treatment but also increases the success of the drugs in melanoma and lung cancer.

This type of immunotherapy, called "checkpoint blockade", ramps up the ability of immune cells called T-cells to fight cancer by removing the "cloaking effect" that tumours use to hide from them.

Checkpoint blockade therapy is effective in several tumour types, but generally ineffective in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas.

The study's findings suggest that when this immunotherapy is combined with a stem cell transplant, which the researchers call "immunotransplant", the process ramps up the T cells to increase the cancer-killing immune response tenfold, allowing it to be effective for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and more successful for melanoma and lung cancer.

The transplant works by "making space" for re-infused immune cells (T cells) to proliferate by clearing out a patient's original immune system. While they are proliferating and building the immune system back up, they become activated, and the anti-tumour T cells' anti-cancer effect becomes stronger.

"Using immunotransplant to enhance the efficacy of checkpoint blockade therapy could be broadly significant as these immunotherapies are a standard therapy for melanoma, kidney cancer, lung cancer, and others," said the study's corresponding author Joshua Brody, MD at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.

"Even for settings in which checkpoint blockade therapy proves ineffective, our data suggest that its efficacy may be 'rescued' by immunotransplant. This research also suggests that the addition of checkpoint blockade may improve other T cell therapies, such as CAR-T therapy."

The findings have prompted the initiation of a clinical trial using the immunotransplant approach to treat patients with aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Joshua BrodyMount Sinai HospitalNew York
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalNew York Helicopter Crash Video: 6 Killed as Chopper Plunges Into Hudson River in Manhattan

MumbaiAir India Flight to New York Returns to Mumbai After Mid-Air Threat

InternationalNew York Fire Station Collapses Under Heavy Snow; Firefighters on Roof Narrowly Escape ( Watch)

InternationalNew York Tragedy: Mother Drowns 6-Year-Old Daughter in Bathtub During 'Baptism' Ritual At Home

Entertainment'Just Google Me': Neil Nitin Mukesh Recalls Being Questioned About His Indian Nationality at New York Airport

स्वास्थ्य Realted Stories

HealthScreening for both active and dormant TB infection key to improve detection: Study

HealthMinister Ashish Sood outlines plan to make Delhi a 'credible medical destination'

HealthIndia reduced poverty levels with targeted welfare schemes, economic reforms: World Bank

HealthDelhi: Ayushman health card registration begins for 70-plus senior citizens; scheme launch on April 28

HealthDid You Know? These 5 Habits Might Affecting Your Brain Health