New insights into cancer immunoediting and its three component phases—elimination, equilibrium and escape

D Mittal, MM Gubin, RD Schreiber, MJ Smyth - Current opinion in …, 2014 - Elsevier
Current opinion in immunology, 2014Elsevier
Highlights•Genomics analyses to identify the targets of cancer immunoediting and design
personalized cancer immunotherapy.•Emerging role of innate immune cells (NK, DC,
macrophages) in cancer immune surveillance.•Equilibrium is a prolonged and depends on
adaptive immune system and cytokines such as IL-12 and IL-23.•Tumour cells modulate
intrinsic and extrinsic pathways to escape host tumour immunity.•Recent advances in
immunotherapy based on targeting of immune escape checkpoints and tumour …
Highlights
  • Genomics analyses to identify the targets of cancer immunoediting and design personalized cancer immunotherapy.
  • Emerging role of innate immune cells (NK, DC, macrophages) in cancer immune surveillance.
  • Equilibrium is a prolonged and depends on adaptive immune system and cytokines such as IL-12 and IL-23.
  • Tumour cells modulate intrinsic and extrinsic pathways to escape host tumour immunity.
  • Recent advances in immunotherapy based on targeting of immune escape checkpoints and tumour metabolism.
The principles of cancer immunoediting have set the foundations for understanding the dual host-protective and tumour sculpting actions of immunity on cancer and establishing the basis for novel individualized cancer immunotherapies. During cancer immunoediting, the host immune system shapes tumour fate in three phases through the activation of innate and adaptive immune mechanisms. In the first phase, Elimination, transformed cells are destroyed by a competent immune system. Sporadic tumour cells that manage to survive immune destruction may then enter an Equilibrium phase where editing occurs. The Escape phase represents the third and final phase of the process, where immunologically sculpted tumours begin to grow progressively, become clinically apparent and establish an immunosuppressive tumour microenvironment. This review focuses on important recent developments that have enhanced our understanding of each phase of the cancer immunoediting process, summarizes the discovery of new predictive and prognostic biomarkers and discusses development of novel and objectively effective cancer immunotherapies.
Elsevier