July 27, 2018 | Cancer, Cells, Immunotherapy
The abscopal effect refers to the ability of localized radiation treatment of a tumor to have systemic anti-tumor effects. In the past this has been rare and deemed almost a magical form of recovery. However, with continued developments in cancer research and immunotherapy strategies, this miraculous form of recovery is becoming more of a realistic possibility for cancer patients. How does this work exactly? Formerly, radiation therapy has been used as a localized treatment focused on controlling and killing cancer tumor cells by direct damage while minimizing healthy tissue damage. But as doctors are discovering, radiation therapy can elicit systemic tumor effects by acting as an immunomodulator to the tumor microenvironment.
Radiation can act as an immunomodulator in several ways. By inducing cell death, radiation causes a release of immunologic factors, one of these factors is improved antigen presentation to T cells. Radiation also causes local inflammation, which alerts the immune system. The immune system will send cells, including T cells, to the site of inflammation where they are presented with these antigens. The antigens will then trigger the production of new antibodies that recognize the cancer cells as foreign. This is very important because one of the reasons cancer is so hard to kill is that your body doesn’t recognize it as foreign and therefore won’t attack. Now, after radiation, these new antibodies are traveling through the body and when they come across other cancerous tumors they know to attack.
https://cancercelltreatment.com/2018/07 ... al-effect/
Systemic Anti-Tumor Effects – The Abscopal Effect
Non-ASPS articles which could be relevant.
Return to “Other Publications”
Jump to
- Welcome to CureASPS.org!
- ↳ Guest Book
- ↳ Forum Issues and Suggestions
- News and Updates
- ↳ Personal Stories and Updates
- ↳ Success Stories
- ↳ Rest In Peace
- ↳ Anonymous Patient Updates
- ↳ Chinese group news
- ↳ Medical Publications
- ↳ Other Publications
- ↳ Sarcoma Meetings and Conferences
- ASPS Clinical Trials
- ↳ Other Clinical Trials
- ↳ COMPLETED - ARQ 197 Clinical Trial
- ↳ COMPLETED - Dana Farber Vaccine Clinical Trial (GVAX)
- ↳ Dasatinib
- ↳ Alisertib
- ↳ Cediranib
- ↳ Anlotinib
- ↳ Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI)
- ↳ Axitinib and Pembrolizumab (Keytruda) in Miami, US
- ↳ TECENTRIQ (atezolizumab) by Genentech
- ↳ Pfizer's PF-06801591
- ↳ Durvalumab+Tremelimumab at MDACC
- Symptoms and Diagnostics
- ↳ Symptoms
- ↳ Scan Types and Follow-Up
- ↳ Molecular Studies
- ↳ Pathology results
- Primary Tumor Treatment
- ↳ Resection
- ↳ Treatment of Non-Resectable Primary Tumor
- ↳ Radiation
- Systemic Treatment
- ↳ TKI
- ↳ Sutent (sunitinib)
- ↳ Pazopanib
- ↳ Сabozantinib (Cometriq)
- ↳ Sorafenib
- ↳ Chemotherapy
- ↳ Metronomic chemotherapy
- ↳ Temozolomide (Temodar)
- ↳ Side effects of systemic treatments
- ↳ Interferon alpha
- ↳ Immune checkpoint inhibitors ICI (PD-1 and PD-L1 targeting drugs)
- ↳ Keytruda
- ↳ Opdivo
- ↳ TECENTRIQ (atezolizumab)
- ↳ Toxicity, problems and potentiation strategies
- ↳ Treatment response criteria and evaluation/scanning problems/rare cases
- ↳ treatment discontinuation/re-treatment
- Metastatic Disease Treatment
- ↳ Local treatment modalities
- ↳ cryoablation
- ↳ Side effects/complications of the local ablations
- ↳ Radiosurgery
- ↳ Microwave ablation
- ↳ High intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU)
- ↳ Lung Metastases
- ↳ Laser assisted surgery
- ↳ Brain Metastases
- ↳ Bone Metastases
- ↳ Other Metastases
- ↳ Abdominal Metastases
- ↳ Liver metastases
- ↳ Heart Metastases
- ↳ Spinal metastases
- ↳ Adrenal metastases
- ↳ Pancreatic metastases
- Living with ASPS
- ↳ Insurance Coverage
- ↳ Second opinion from a sarcoma center
- ↳ Finanical assistance
- ↳ Diet and lifestyle
- ↳ Related studies
- ↳ Pain management
- ↳ Travel assistance