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. 2012 Jan 1;1(1):48-55.
doi: 10.4161/onci.1.1.18344.

Immunotherapy of hepatocellular carcinoma: Unique challenges and clinical opportunities

Affiliations

Immunotherapy of hepatocellular carcinoma: Unique challenges and clinical opportunities

Angela D Pardee et al. Oncoimmunology. .

Abstract

Current therapies for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are marginally effective and exacerbate underlying liver disease. The ability of immunotherapy to elicit nontoxic, systemic, long-lived anti-tumor activity makes it particularly well-suited for use in the setting of HCC. While therapeutic benefit has been achieved in early clinical trials, the efficacy of immune-based therapies is limited by several unique properties of HCC, most notably the inherently tolerogenic character of the liver in both healthy and diseased (chronically-infected or tumor-bearing) states. Therapeutic regimens that both counteract these immunosuppressive mechanisms and amplify tumor-specific immunity are expected to profoundly improve clinical outcomes for HCC patients.

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Figures

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Figure 1. Evolving liver immunobiology during HCC development. Numerous tolerogenic factors, many of which are listed here, support immunoregulation in both the steady-state and diseased (chronically-infected or tumor-bearing) liver. These immunosuppressive mechanisms likely accumulate during HBV/HCV-mediated hepatocarcinogenesis and coexist in patients with advanced HCC lesions. See text for all associated references.
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Figure 2. Future therapeutic strategies for HCC. (1) Several vaccine approaches have been tested in HCC, including strategies to target AFP and other antigens by DNA, virus, peptide and DC-based vaccines. (2) Sorafenib has been licensed for HCC and other next-generation TKIs are in clinical testing, while bevacizumab (anti-VEGF) is under investigation in HCC as well. (3) Immunomodulatory agents, including those to release immune suppression and boost T cell function, are promising. While more technically challenging, adoptive transfer of antigen-specific T cells, such as tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL), are nearing clinical translation at more sites around the globe. (4) Rationally designed combinations of standard-of-care ablation approaches (i.e., chemotherapy, RFA, TAE) with immunotherapy strategies will likely work synergistically to improve clinical outcomes for HCC patients.

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