학술논문

Immunotherapy treatments for small-cell lung cancer: past, present and future
Document Type
Report
Source
Lung Cancer Management. December 2013, Vol. 2 Issue 6, p517, 9 p.
Subject
Care and treatment
Research
Comparative analysis
Cancer treatment -- Research
Small cell lung cancer -- Care and treatment
Immunotherapy -- Comparative analysis
Lung cancer, Small cell -- Care and treatment
Cancer -- Care and treatment
Language
English
ISSN
1758-1966
Abstract
Author(s): Matthew Whitehurst [sup.1] , Alberto Chiappori [sup.[*]] [sup.2] Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer-related mortality for both men and women in the USA [sup.[101]] . The Surveillance [...]
SUMMARY Small-cell lung cancer remains a considerable cause of morbidity and mortality. To this day, first-line therapy continues to be a platinum agent with etoposide, combined with radiation therapy in cases of limited stage disease. Numerous, largely unsuccessful, attempts at controlling the disease have included different chemotherapy strategies, the utilization of antiangiogenic agents, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors and other treatment modalities. Immunotherapy, including vaccines, immune response modifiers, inhibitors of check point blockades and immunologic-targeted toxins may well be the future of treatment, not only to enhance the proven chemotherapy effects, but to improve the control of minimal residual disease and the response with salvage chemotherapy. This article reviews the current advances in immunotherapeutic strategies against small-cell lung cancer.