Journal article

Neoadjuvant triplet immune checkpoint blockade in newly diagnosed glioblastoma

GV Long, E Shklovskaya, L Satgunaseelan, Y Mao, IP da Silva, KA Perry, RJ Diefenbach, TN Gide, B Shivalingam, ME Buckland, M Gonzalez, N Caixeiro, IA Vergara, X Bai, RV Rawson, E Hsiao, U Palendira, TG Phan, AM Menzies, MS Carlino Show all

Nature Medicine | Published : 2025

Open access

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is an aggressive primary adult brain tumor that rapidly recurs after standard-of-care treatments, including surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. While immune checkpoint inhibitor therapies have transformed outcomes in many tumor types, particularly when used neoadjuvantly or as a first-line treatment, including in melanoma brain metastases, they have shown limited efficacy in patients with resected or recurrent GBM. The lack of efficacy has been attributed to the scarcity of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment and low tumor mutation burden typical of GBM tumors, plus exclusion of large molecules from the brain parenchyma. W..

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University of Melbourne Researchers