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The continuous search for therapeutic approaches that improve the conventional treatments of neoplasms, together with an improved understanding of the immune system, has led in recent years to the development of Immunotherapy. Basically, a distinction can be made between two forms of immunotherapy: passive immunotherapy, which consists in the transfer of antibodies or cells previously generated in vitro that are directed against the tumour, and active immunotherapy, which attempts to activate in vivo the immune system and induce it to elaborate a specific response against the tumor antibodies. Hematological neoplasms, specifically some B lymphomas, express in their membrane an immunoglobulin that is considered a specific antigen of the tumour, which is why these diseases have become the ideal target for immunotherapy treatments. There are many alternatives, ranging from protein vaccines, which have already shown clinical benefits, to those of the second generation, which make use of the new techniques of molecular biology to increase the efficacy of the vaccines and obtain their production in a quicker and less costly way, but with which there are not yet definitive clinical results.

Original publication

DOI

10.4321/s1137-66272004000100006

Type

Journal article

Journal

Anales del sistema sanitario de Navarra

Publication Date

01/2004

Volume

27

Pages

45 - 62

Addresses

Area de Terapia Celular, Clínica Universitaria de Navarra. sinoges@unav.es

Keywords

Dendritic Cells, Humans, Lymphoma, Follicular, Cancer Vaccines, Immunization, Passive, Immunotherapy, Active, Clinical Trials as Topic