CancerResearch@UCC, University College Cork, Western Gateway Building, Western Road, Cork, Ireland; APC Microbiome Ireland, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
CancerResearch@UCC, University College Cork, Western Gateway Building, Western Road, Cork, Ireland; Department of Medicine, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland; APC Microbiome Ireland, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
Eur J Surg Oncol. 2022 Sep;48(9):1895-1900. doi: 10.1016/j.ejso.2022.05.023. Epub 2022 May 30.
Electrochemotherapy (ECT), the application of an electric impulse to deliver chemotherapy drugs into cells, has been in clinical trials since the early 1990s and has been used for a variety of different malignancies including melanoma and sarcoma. A standard operating procedure for the use of ECT in clinical settings has been established since 2006. ECT is very effective in reducing the local tumour burden via T-cell dependent killing of the cancer cells; however abscopal effects are not consistently observed. Currently little is known or understood about how ECT affects the immune cell population within the treated tumour and how these changes could impact the immune response. In this manuscript, we will review the current knowledge on ECT in the context of its interactions with the immune system and discuss how the gained knowledge could be harnessed to develop a potent ECT-immune co-treatment combination (Electroimmunotherapy).
电化学疗法(ECT),即将电脉冲应用于将化疗药物递送至细胞内的疗法,自 20 世纪 90 年代初以来一直在临床试验中进行,并已用于治疗多种不同的恶性肿瘤,包括黑色素瘤和肉瘤。自 2006 年以来,已经建立了在临床环境中使用 ECT 的标准操作程序。ECT 通过依赖于 T 细胞的杀伤癌细胞来非常有效地减少局部肿瘤负担;然而,并非始终观察到远隔效应。目前,对于 ECT 如何影响治疗肿瘤内的免疫细胞群以及这些变化如何影响免疫反应,人们知之甚少或理解甚少。在本文中,我们将回顾 ECT 在与免疫系统相互作用方面的现有知识,并讨论如何利用这些知识来开发有效的 ECT-免疫联合治疗组合(Electroimmunotherapy)。