Baniyash Michal
Faculty of Medicine, Israel-Canada Medical Research Institute, The Lautenberg Center for General and Tumor Immunology, The Hebrew University, POB 12272, 91120, Jerusalem, Israel.
Cancer Immunol Immunother. 2016 Jul;65(7):857-67. doi: 10.1007/s00262-016-1849-y. Epub 2016 May 25.
Chronic inflammation, typical of various diseases including cancer, is a "silent bomb within the body," leading to complications that are only evident in most cases upon their appearance, when disease is already deteriorated. Chronic inflammation is associated with accumulation of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), which lead to immunosuppression. MDSCs have numerous harmful effects as they support tumor initiation, tumor growth and spreading, which in turn, perpetuate the inflammatory and suppressive conditions, thus preventing anticancer responses. As the concept of the immune system combating many types of tumors was revived in recent years, immunotherapy has dramatically changed the view of cancer treatment, and numerous novel therapies have been developed and approved by the FDA. However, cumulative clinical data point at very limited success rates. It is most likely that the developing chronic inflammation and MDSC-induced immunosuppression interfere with responses to such treatments and hence are major obstacles in achieving higher response rates to immune-based therapies. Moreover, chemotherapies were shown to have adverse immunoregulatory effects, enhancing or decreasing MDSC levels and activity, thus affecting treatment success. Therefore, therapeutic manipulations of chronic inflammation and MDSCs during cancer development are likely to enhance efficacy of immune- and chemo-based treatments, switching chronic pro-cancer inflammatory environments to an anticancerous milieu. Based on the functional relevance of immune networking in tumors, it is critical to merge monitoring immune system biomarkers into the traditional patient's categorization and treatment regimens. This will provide new tools for clinical practice, allowing appropriate management of cancer patients toward a better-personalized medicine.
慢性炎症是包括癌症在内的多种疾病的典型特征,是“体内的一颗沉默炸弹”,会引发各种并发症,而这些并发症在大多数情况下只有在出现时才会显现出来,此时疾病已经恶化。慢性炎症与髓系来源的抑制细胞(MDSCs)的积累有关,MDSCs会导致免疫抑制。MDSCs具有许多有害作用,因为它们支持肿瘤的起始、生长和扩散,这反过来又使炎症和抑制状态持续存在,从而阻止抗癌反应。近年来,随着免疫系统对抗多种肿瘤这一概念的重新兴起,免疫疗法极大地改变了癌症治疗的观念,许多新疗法已被美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)研发并批准。然而,累积的临床数据显示成功率非常有限。很可能是不断发展的慢性炎症和MDSC诱导的免疫抑制干扰了对这类治疗的反应,因此是实现更高免疫治疗反应率的主要障碍。此外,化疗已被证明具有不良的免疫调节作用,会提高或降低MDSC的水平和活性,从而影响治疗效果。因此,在癌症发展过程中对慢性炎症和MDSCs进行治疗性干预,可能会提高免疫治疗和化疗的疗效,将慢性促癌炎症环境转变为抗癌环境。基于肿瘤中免疫网络的功能相关性,将监测免疫系统生物标志物纳入传统的患者分类和治疗方案至关重要。这将为临床实践提供新工具,使癌症患者得到适当管理,朝着更好的个性化医疗发展。