Clinical Studies on Cytokine-Induced Killer Cells: Lessons from Lymphoma Trials

Cancers (Basel). 2021 Nov 29;13(23):6007. doi: 10.3390/cancers13236007.

Abstract

Cancer is a complex disease where resistance to therapies and relapses often pose a serious clinical challenge. The scenario is even more complicated when the cancer type itself is heterogeneous in nature, e.g., lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphocytes which constitutes more than 70 different subtypes. Indeed, the treatment options continue to expand in lymphomas. Herein, we provide insights into lymphoma-specific clinical trials based on cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cell therapy and other pre-clinical lymphoma models where CIK cells have been used along with other synergetic tumor-targeting immune modules to improve their therapeutic potential. From a broader perspective, we will highlight that CIK cell therapy has potential, and in this rapidly evolving landscape of cancer therapies its optimization (as a personalized therapeutic approach) will be beneficial in lymphomas.

Keywords: clinical study; cytokine-induced killer cells; immunotherapy; lymphoma.

Publication types

  • Review