Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Promises and challenges of adoptive T-cell therapies for solid tumours

Matteo Morotti, Ashwag Albukhari, Abdulkhaliq Alsaadi, Mara Artibani, James D. Brenton, Stuart M. Curbishley, Tao Dong, Michael L. Dustin, Zhiyuan Hu, Nicholas McGranahan, Martin L. Miller, Laura Santana-Gonzalez, Leonard W. Seymour, Tingyan Shi, Peter Van Loo

British Journal of Cancer · 2021 · ▲ 267 citations

Abstract

Cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide and, despite new targeted therapies and immunotherapies, many patients with advanced-stage- or high-risk cancers still die, owing to metastatic disease. Adoptive T-cell therapy, involving the autologous or allogeneic transplant of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes or genetically modified T cells expressing novel T-cell receptors or chimeric antigen receptors, has shown promise in the treatment of cancer patients, leading to durable responses and, in some cases, cure. Technological advances in genomics, computational biology, immunology and cell manufacturing have brought the aspiration of individualised therapies for cancer patients closer to reality. This new era of cell-based individualised therapeutics challenges the traditional standards of therapeutic interventions and provides opportunities for a paradigm shift in our approach to cancer therapy. Invited speakers at a 2020 symposium discussed three areas-cancer genomics, cancer immunology and cell-therapy manufacturing-that are essential to the effective translation of T-cell therapies in the treatment of solid malignancies. Key advances have been made in understanding genetic intratumour heterogeneity, and strategies to accurately identify neoantigens, overcome T-cell exhaustion and circumvent tumour immunosuppression after cell-therapy infusion are being developed. Advances are being made in cell-manufacturing approaches that have the potential to establish cell-therapies as credible therapeutic options. T-cell therapies face many challenges but hold great promise for improving clinical outcomes for patients with solid tumours.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41416-021-01353-6
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-08 MST

Cite this

APA
Morotti, M., Albukhari, A., Alsaadi, A., Artibani, M., Brenton, J.D., Curbishley, S.M., Dong, T., Dustin, M.L., Hu, Z., McGranahan, N., Miller, M.L., Santana-Gonzalez, L., Seymour, L.W., Shi, T., Loo, P.V., Yau, C., White, H., Wietek, N., Church, D.N., &amp; Wedge, D.C. (2021). Promises and challenges of adoptive T-cell therapies for solid tumours. <em>British Journal of Cancer</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-021-01353-6
Vancouver
Morotti M, Albukhari A, Alsaadi A, Artibani M, Brenton JD, Curbishley SM, et al. Promises and challenges of adoptive T-cell therapies for solid tumours. British Journal of Cancer. 2021. doi:10.1038/s41416-021-01353-6.
BibTeX
@article{matteo2021Promis, title = {Promises and challenges of adoptive T-cell therapies for solid tumours}, author = {Matteo Morotti and Ashwag Albukhari and Abdulkhaliq Alsaadi and Mara Artibani and James D. Brenton and Stuart M. Curbishley and Tao Dong and Michael L. Dustin and Zhiyuan Hu and Nicholas McGranahan and Martin L. Miller and Laura Santana-Gonzalez and Leonard W. Seymour and Tingyan Shi and Peter Van Loo and Christopher Yau and Helen White and Nina Wietek and David N. Church and David C. Wedge and Ahmed A. Ahmed}, journal = {British Journal of Cancer}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.1038/s41416-021-01353-6}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings