Immunotherapies represent a significant breakthrough in cancer treatment, enabling the immune system to recognize and eliminate cancer cells while leaving healthy cells intact. 

These therapies offer options to people with advanced or treatment-resistant cancer. Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center is actively involved in the discovery and testing of new immunotherapy strategies to more precisely target and treat both common and rare cancers. Our research breakthroughs continue to lead game-changing cancer immunotherapy treatment practices and give patients the opportunity to join upcoming clinical trials

Leading-Edge Treatments, Outstanding Care

At Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center, our dedicated, world-renowned team offers leading-edge immunotherapy treatments for people with advanced cancers. Many of these treatments are already approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Others are available only through clinical trials at certain places, including our Cancer Center.

To provide truly personalized care, a dedicated team of highly skilled cancer specialists is built around you, with experts who specialize in your type of cancer and understand your lifestyle. Our multidisciplinary approach helps provide a quicker and more accurate diagnosis, and may utilize immunotherapies alone or in combination with standard treatment approaches, such as surgery, to treat your cancer.

Immunotherapy treatment uses a process very similar to bone marrow transplantation. With extensive experience and expertise in bone marrow transplantation, Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center has the advanced knowledge and resources needed to provide this complex therapy.

Our Cancer Center is accredited by the Foundation for the Accreditation of Cellular Therapy (FACT) for the full spectrum of adult and pediatric stem cell transplant procedures. We are one of only a few cancer centers in the country with this accreditation, recognizing that our team is of the highest caliber and offers state-of-the-art immunotherapy and bone marrow transplant care.

Personalized, Targeted Treatment

Immunotherapy is a type of precision medicine that personalizes a person’s treatment plan based on their genetics, environment, lifestyle and other factors.

With precision medicine, we use specific tests to pinpoint which treatment regimen is most likely to benefit you. Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center is at the forefront of this approach, and one of the first centers in the New York region to provide genetic testing options that identify who is more likely to benefit from immunotherapy versus chemotherapy.

As an NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center, Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center supports the mission and guidelines of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The following information about types of cancer, prevention and treatments is provided by the NCI.

Immunotherapy to Treat Cancer

Immunotherapy is a type of cancer treatment that helps your immune system fight cancer. The immune system helps your body fight infections and other diseases. It is made up of white blood cells and organs and tissues of the lymph system.

Immunotherapy is a type of biological therapy. Biological therapy is a type of treatment that uses substances made from living organisms to treat cancer.

How does immunotherapy work against cancer?

As part of its normal function, the immune system detects and destroys abnormal cells and most likely prevents or curbs the growth of many cancers. For instance, immune cells are sometimes found in and around tumors. These cells, called tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes or TILs, are a sign that the immune system is responding to the tumor. People whose tumors contain TILs often do better than people whose tumors don’t contain them.

Even though the immune system can prevent or slow cancer growth, cancer cells have ways to avoid destruction by the immune system. For example, cancer cells may:

  • Have genetic changes that make them less visible to the immune system.
  • Have proteins on their surface that turn off immune cells.
  • Change the normal cells around the tumor so they interfere with how the immune system responds to the cancer cells.

Immunotherapy helps the immune system to better act against cancer.

What are the types of immunotherapy?

Several types of immunotherapy are used to treat cancer. These include:

  • Immune checkpoint inhibitors, which are drugs that block immune checkpoints. These checkpoints are a normal part of the immune system and keep immune responses from being too strong. By blocking them, these drugs allow immune cells to respond more strongly to cancer.

    Learn more about immune checkpoint inhibitors.

  • T-cell transfer therapy, which is a treatment that boosts the natural ability of your T cells to fight cancer. In this treatment, immune cells are taken from your tumor. Those that are most active against your cancer are selected or changed in the lab to better attack your cancer cells, grown in large batches, and put back into your body through a needle in a vein.

    T-cell transfer therapy may also be called adoptive cell therapy, adoptive immunotherapy, or immune cell therapy.

    Learn more about T-cell transfer therapy.

  • Monoclonal antibodies, which are immune system proteins created in the lab that are designed to bind to specific targets on cancer cells. Some monoclonal antibodies mark cancer cells so that they will be better seen and destroyed by the immune system. Such monoclonal antibodies are a type of immunotherapy.

    Monoclonal antibodies may also be called therapeutic antibodies.

    Learn more about monoclonal antibodies.

  • Treatment vaccines, which work against cancer by boosting your immune system’s response to cancer cells. Treatment vaccines are different from the ones that help prevent disease.

    Learn more about cancer treatment vaccines.

  • Immune system modulators, which enhance the body’s immune response against cancer. Some of these agents affect specific parts of the immune system, whereas others affect the immune system in a more general way.

    Learn more about immune system modulators.

Which cancers are treated with immunotherapy?

Immunotherapy drugs have been approved to treat many types of cancer. However, immunotherapy is not yet as widely used as surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy. To learn about whether immunotherapy may be used to treat your cancer, see the PDQ® adult cancer treatment summaries and childhood cancer treatment summaries.

What are the side effects of immunotherapy?

Immunotherapy can cause side effects, many of which happen when the immune system that has been revved-up to act against the cancer also acts against healthy cells and tissues in your body.

Learn more about immunotherapy side effects.

How is immunotherapy given?

Different forms of immunotherapy may be given in different ways. These include:

  • intravenous (IV)
    The immunotherapy goes directly into a vein.
  • oral
    The immunotherapy comes in pills or capsules that you swallow.
  • topical
    The immunotherapy comes in a cream that you rub onto your skin. This type of immunotherapy can be used for very early skin cancer.
  • intravesical
    The immunotherapy goes directly into the bladder.

Where do you go for immunotherapy?

You may receive immunotherapy in a doctor’s office, clinic, or outpatient unit in a hospital. Outpatient means you do not spend the night in the hospital.

How often do you receive immunotherapy?

How often and how long you receive immunotherapy depends on:

  • your type of cancer and how advanced it is
  • the type of immunotherapy you get
  • how your body reacts to treatment

You may have treatment every day, week, or month. Some types of immunotherapy given in cycles. A cycle is a period of treatment followed by a period of rest. The rest period gives your body a chance to recover, respond to immunotherapy, and build new healthy cells.

How can you tell if immunotherapy is working?

You will see your doctor often. He or she will give you physical exams and ask you how you feel. You will have medical tests, such as blood tests and different types of scans. These tests will measure the size of your tumor and look for changes in your blood work.

What is the current research in immunotherapy?

Researchers are focusing on several major areas to improve immunotherapy, including:

  • Finding solutions for resistance.
    Researchers are testing combinations of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other types of immunotherapy, targeted therapy, and radiation therapy to overcome resistance to immunotherapy.
  • Finding ways to predict responses to immunotherapy.
    Only a small portion of people who receive immunotherapy will respond to the treatment. Finding ways to predict which people will respond to treatment is a major area of research.
  • Learning more about how cancer cells evade or suppress immune responses against them.
    A better understanding of how cancer cells get around the immune system could lead to the development of new drugs that block those processes.
  • How to reduce the side effects of treatment with immunotherapy.

How do you find clinical trials that are testing immunotherapy?

To find clinical research studies that involve immunotherapy visit Find NCI-Supported Clinical Trials or call the Cancer Information Service, NCI’s contact center, at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).

NCI’s list of cancer clinical trials includes all NCI-supported clinical trials that are taking place across the United States and Canada, including the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, MD.

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This content is provided by the National Cancer Institute (www.cancer.gov)
Syndicated Content Details:
Source URL: https://www.cancer.gov/node/915530/syndication
Source Agency: National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Captured Date: 2017-05-04 19:10:47.0