The immunologic aspects of poxvirus oncolytic therapy Journal Article


Authors: Worschech, A.; Haddad, D.; Stroncek, D. F.; Wang, E.; Marincola, F. M.; Szalay, A. A.
Article Title: The immunologic aspects of poxvirus oncolytic therapy
Abstract: The concept of using replicating oncolytic viruses in cancer therapy dates to the beginning of the twentieth century. However, in the last few years, an increasing number of pre-clinical and clinical trials have been carried out with promising preliminarily results. Novel, indeed, is the suggestion that viral oncolytic therapy might not operate exclusively through an oncolysis-mediated process but additionally requires the "assistance" of the host's immune system. Originally, the host's immune response was believed to play a predominant obstructive role against viral replication, hence limiting the anti-tumor efficacy of viral vectors. Recent data, however, suggest that the immune response may also play a key role in promoting tumor destruction in association with the oncolytic process. In fact, immune effector pathways activated during oncolytic virus-induced tumor rejection seem to follow a similar pattern to those observed when the broader phenomenon of immune-mediated tissue-specific rejection occurs in other immune-related pathologies. We recently formulated the "Immunologic Constant of Rejection" hypothesis, emphasizing commonalties in transcriptional patterns observed when tissue-destruction occurs: whether with a favorable outcome, such as in tumor rejection and pathogen clearance; or a destructive one, such as in allograft rejection or autoimmunity. Here, we propose that a similar mechanism induces clearance of virally infected tumors and that such a mechanism is primarily dependent on innate immune functions. © 2009 US Government.
Keywords: review; drug efficacy; nonhuman; neoplasms; cd8 antigen; cancer immunotherapy; immune response; transcription regulation; gamma interferon; gene therapy; oncolytic virotherapy; vaccinia virus; innate immunity; cd4 antigen; virus replication; gamma interferon inducible protein 10; tumor rejection; chemokine receptor ccr2; immunopathology; monocyte chemotactic protein 1; cytopathogenic effect, viral; history of medicine; monocyte chemotactic protein 5; virus vector; tissue specificity; interleukin 18; oncolytic therapy; cxcl9 chemokine; interleukin 13 receptor; stromal cell derived factor 1; thymus and activation regulated chemokine; hypothesis; immunologic constant of rejection hypothesis; immunopharmacology; poxvirus; poxviridae
Journal Title: Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
Volume: 58
Issue: 9
ISSN: 0340-7004
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2009-09-01
Start Page: 1355
End Page: 1362
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s00262-009-0686-7
PUBMED: 19266198
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3404612
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 7" - "Export Date: 30 November 2010" - "CODEN: CIIMD" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Dana Haddad
    21 Haddad