Universes collide: combining immunotherapy with targeted therapy for cancer

JA Wargo, ZA Cooper, KT Flaherty - Cancer discovery, 2014 - AACR
Cancer discovery, 2014AACR
There have been significant advances in the past several years with regard to targeted
therapy and immunotherapy for cancer. This is highlighted in melanoma, where treatment
with targeted therapy (against the BRAF oncoprotein) results in responses in the majority of
patients, although the duration of response is limited. In contrast, treatment with
immunotherapy results in a lower response rate, but one that tends to be more durable.
Insights about mechanisms of response and potential synergy between these treatment …
Abstract
There have been significant advances in the past several years with regard to targeted therapy and immunotherapy for cancer. This is highlighted in melanoma, where treatment with targeted therapy (against the BRAF oncoprotein) results in responses in the majority of patients, although the duration of response is limited. In contrast, treatment with immunotherapy results in a lower response rate, but one that tends to be more durable. Insights about mechanisms of response and potential synergy between these treatment strategies for melanoma are a focus of this review, with opportunities to extend these insights to the treatment of other cancers.
Significance: Two major advances in melanoma have occurred concurrently and involve treatment with targeted therapy and immune checkpoint blockade. However, each of these approaches has limitations with regard to overall response rates or duration of response. To address this, investigators have proposed combining these strategies, and this concept is being tested empirically in clinical trials. There is a scientific rationale supporting the combination of targeted therapy and immunotherapy, and these concepts are discussed herein. Cancer Discov; 4(12); 1377–86. ©2014 AACR.
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