Journal article

Clinical application of genetically modified T cells in cancer therapy

MH Kershaw, JA Westwood, CY Slaney, PK Darcy

Clinical and Translational Immunology | Published : 2014

Abstract

Immunotherapies are emerging as highly promising approaches for the treatment of cancer. In these approaches, a variety of materials are used to boost immunity against malignant cells. A key component of many of these approaches is functional tumor-specific T cells, but the existence and activity of sufficient T cells in the immune repertoire is not always the case. Recent methods of generating tumor-specific T cells include the genetic modification of patient lymphocytes with receptors to endow them with tumor specificity. These T cells are then expanded in vitro followed by infusion of the patient in adoptive cell transfer protocols. Genes used to modify T cells include those encoding T-ce..

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University of Melbourne Researchers