Immunotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

How is Immunity related to Cancer?

A

= tumours are altered as ‘self’

= cancer cells are subtly different to normal cells
(BUT frequently recognised and eliminated by immune system)

TILs (Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes)
= immune cells found in and around tumours
= people with tumours containing TILs = have better prognosis

= cancer incidence high in immunosuppressed patients
(e.g. HIV , organ recipients)

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2
Q

How does Immune Evasion by Cancer cells occur?

A

= cancers may have genetic changes that make them less visible to immune system
(e.g. upregulate immune checkpoint proteins)

= change the normal cells around the tumour so they interfere with how the immune system responds to the cancer cells

= immunotherapy helps immune system to better act against cancer

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3
Q

What cells are involved in cancer immunity?

A

Antibodies

Cytotoxic T cells

Natural Killer Cells

Antigen presenting cell

Helper T cells

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4
Q

What are the main types of immunotherapy?

A

Cancer specific:
1. Immune checkpoint inhibitors
= block immune checkpoints
= e.g. PD1.PDL1 inhibitors
= e.g. CTLA-4 inhibitors

  1. T-cell transfer therapy
    = e.g. TIL therapy
    = e.g. CAR-T cell therapy
  2. Monoclonal antibodies
  3. Cancer Treatment Vaccines

Non-cancer specific:
5. Immune system modulators: cytokines
= interferons
= interleukins

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5
Q

What are checkpoint inhibitors?

A

Immune checkpoints are a normal part of immune system
= role is to prevent an immune response from being so strong it destroys healthy cells in the body

= immune checkpoint proteins engage with receptors on T-cells to downregulate their activity

= cancer cells can overexpress immune checkpoint proteins to dampen T-cell activity

= e.g. Anti-PDL and Anti-PDL1
= PDL and PDL1 bind = T cell not activated = inhibition of T cell activity
= anti-PD1 antibodies (immune checkpoint inhibitors)
= bind to PD1 = T cell activated = upregulation of immune response

e.g. CTLA-4 inhibition
= it’s ligands: protein B7-1 and B7-2 expressed on APCs
= when they interact, inhibits T cell activity
= helps prevent excessive immune activation
(cancer cells can hijack this to evade immune response, tumour cells express high levels of CTLA-4 = suppress activity of T cells = prevent tumour attack)

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6
Q

What is T-cell transfer therapy?

A

= uses a patient’s own T-cells, artificially expanded in lab, to kill cancer cells

2 main types:

  1. tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (or TIL) therapy
  2. Car T-cell therapy

= both involve collecting patient’s own T cells, growing them in large numbers in the lab and transferring back to patient

(also known as: adoptive cell therapy, adoptive immunotherapy and immune cell therapy)

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7
Q

What is TIL therapy?

A

= TILs (tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes) found in tumours

= these cells may already be acting against the cancer, but may not be in sufficient numbers to have effect

= lymphocytes tested to identify population that best recognises cancer cells

= these treated with factors to induce rapid expansion

= injected back into patient and attack cancer cells

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8
Q

What is CAR T-cell therapy?

A

= similar to TIL therapy but cells genetically engineered in lab to make them more potent at killing cancer cells

= T cells removed are engineered to express chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) protein

= CARs are designed to allow the T cells to attach to specific proteins on the surface of the cancer cells
(improving their ability to attack the cancer cells)

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9
Q

What is the Chimeric Antigen Receptor?

A

= genetically engineered receptor designed to enhance ability of T cells to recognise and attack cancer cells

= made by combining antigen-binding domain of a monoclonal antibody with T-cell receptor signalling components

= creates a hybrid receptor that can recognise specific antigens on the surface of cancer cells and activate T cells to attack and kill them

= binding of CAR receptor allows formation of an immunological synapse and killing of cancer cell

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10
Q

What are the side-effects of CAR T-cell therapy?

A

Cytokine Release Syndrome
= occurs when transferred T cells release a large amount of cytokines into the blood

Sudden increase in cytokines can cause:
= fever, nausea, headache, rash, rapid heartbeat, low blood pressure, trouble breathing

Most people = mild form

Some = severe / life-threatening

CAR-T cells designed to recognise proteins that are only found on cancer cells
= BUT sometimes recognise normal cells
= can cause side effects e.g. organ damage

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11
Q

What are monoclonal antibodies?

A

= can be used in various ways to treat cancer:

  1. Target systemic radiotherapies
  2. Block signalling from receptor tyrosine kinase (e.g. herceptin)
  3. Aid immune system to recognise and destroy cancer cells

e.g. Bilinatumomab - binds both CD19 (on leukaemia cell surface) and CD3 (on T cell surface)

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12
Q

What are cancer treatment vaccines?

A

= a type of immunotherapy to treat (rather to prevent) cancer

= can help immune system to recognise and react to these antigens and destroy cancer cells that contain them

Cancer treatment vaccines may be made in 3 ways:

  1. From patient’s own tumour cells
    = custom-made so they cause an immune response against unique features of a patient’s cancer
    = rejects tumour cells and prevents tumour formation
  2. From tumour-associated antigens
    = found on cancer cells of many people with a specific type of cancer
    = antigen is processed and loaded onto MHC class II on APC surface
    = generates antigen specific T-cells
  3. From patient’s dendritic cells
    = stimulate immune system to respond to an antigen on tumour cells
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13
Q

What are Immune modulating agents?

A

Cytokines (non-target chemotherapies)
= recruit and activate immune cells
= in some cases, are directly ‘toxic’ to tumours
= specific for certain cancer types and cytokines

Interferons (INFs)
= e.g. INF-alpha
= activates dendritic cells and natural killer cells

Interleukins (ILs)
= e.g. IL-2 = boosts white blood cell numbers, including cytotoxic T cells and natural killer cells
= BUT some e.g. IL-7 , IL-15 significantly enhance survival survival of tumour cells

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14
Q

What are some pro and cons of different cancer treatments?

A
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