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2000
Volume 5, Issue 2
  • ISSN: 1872-2083
  • E-ISSN: 2212-4012

Abstract

Peptides deriving from tumor-associated antigens and recognized by patient T cells have been firstly defined in the early 90's, and then used as vaccine in animal models and in cancer patients. Early trials showed a variable, often even high frequency of patients developing peptide-specific T-cell mediated immune response usually accompanied by a lower frequency of clinical response. Modified, long peptides could be synthesized with a higher in vitro binding to the corresponding HLA allele that only seldom translated into a clear improvement in the tumor response. However, we show here that more recent studies of multipeptide-based vaccines resulted in a higher and more robust T cell response causing also a more effective clinical response particularly in melanoma and prostate cancer patients. In this article, we also used some of the recent patents describing different inventions related to pre-clinical and clinical aspects of peptide based vaccines against human solid tumors.

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/content/journals/biot/10.2174/187220811796365716
2011-08-01
2025-01-11
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/content/journals/biot/10.2174/187220811796365716
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