Yeungnam Univ J Med.  2021 Oct;38(4):308-317. 10.12701/yujm.2021.01312.

An update on immunotherapy with PD-1 and PD-L1 blockade

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Hematology-Oncology, Yeungnam University College of Medicine, Daegu, Korea

Abstract

Cancer is the leading cause of death and is on the rise worldwide. Until 2010, the development of targeted treatment was mainly focused on the growth mechanisms of cancer. Since then, drugs with mechanisms related to tumor immunity, especially immune checkpoint inhibitors, have proven effective, and most pharmaceutical companies are striving to develop related drugs. Programmed cell death-1 and programmed cell death ligand-1 inhibitors have shown great success in various cancer types. They showed durable and sustainable responses and were approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. However, the response to inhibitors showed low percentages of cancer patients; 15% to 20%. Therefore, combination strategies with immunotherapy and conventional treatments were used to overcome the low response rate. Studies on combination therapy have typically reported improvements in the response rate and efficacy in several cancers, including non-small cell lung cancer, small cell lung cancer, breast cancer, and urogenital cancers. The combination of chemotherapy or targeted agents with immunotherapy is one of the leading pathways for cancer treatment.

Keyword

Immunotherapy; Neoplasms; Programmed cell death-1 receptor; Programmed cell death ligand-1 receptor

Figure

  • Fig. 1. Survival curve of each treatment and expected effect with combination of immune checkpoints blockade with conventional therapies. Combination strategies could show synergistic effects to make appropriate microenvironment enough to play immunotherapy. Adapted from Champiat et al. [46] with permission of Elsevier.


Reference

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