mRNA technology has experienced its global breakthrough as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and has long been clinically established. In oncology, however, the actual translation is only now beginning. Opportunities and risks are closely linked – from precise immune activation to the challenge of tumor heterogeneity. Preclinical models demonstrate the potential of mRNA and neoantigen vaccines; clinical studies and congress reports show promising results in melanoma, pancreatic carcinoma, endometrial carcinoma and other tumor entities.
Autoren
- Dr. oec. Odile Schwarz-Herion
Publikation
- InFo ONKOLOGIE & HÄMATOLOGIE
Related Topics
- Adjuvant formulations
- CD8+ T cells
- Combined immune strategies
- Endometrial Cancer
- malignant melanoma and NSCLC
- Neoantigen identification
- Neoantigen vaccines and mRNA vaccines. synthetic long peptides (SLPs)
- Pancreatic Cancer
- Patient-specific tumor mutations (neoantigens)
- PD-1 blockade
- Poly I:C
- TLR3
- Tumor microenvironment
- Type I interferon response
You May Also Like
- Abdominal aortic aneurysms in primary care
Risk-stratified screening and prophylaxis
- Cardiology
Minimally invasive – the quiet triumph of modern heart surgery
- Plastic surgery and reconstructive microsurgery for DFS
Functional limb preservation between infection control, vascular medicine and resurfacing
- Age-related neurocognitive disorders
Neuroprotective effects of Ginkgo biloba extract
How origin and place of residence promote CF-associated diabetes
- Patients with leg swelling
DVT and other common DDs with peripheral edema
- Pancreatic Cancer
Innovative early detection with a focus on liquid biopsy and AI
- Cervical Cancer