The dark side of immunotherapy: pancreatic cancer

Cancer Drug Resist. 2020 May 11;3(3):491-520. doi: 10.20517/cdr.2020.13. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Since the journal Science deemed cancer immunotherapy as the "breakthrough of the year" in 2014, there has been an explosion of clinical trials involving immunotherapeutic approaches that, in the last decade - thanks also to the renaissance of the immunosurveillance theory (renamed the three Es theory) - have been continuously and successfully developed. In the latest update of the development of the immuno-oncology drug pipeline, published last November by Nature Review Drug Discovery, it was clearly reported that the immunoactive drugs under study almost doubled in just two years. Of the different classes of passive and active immunotherapies, "cell therapy" is the fastest growing. The aim of this review is to discuss the preclinical and clinical studies that have focused on different immuno-oncology approaches applied to pancreatic cancer, which we assign to the "dark side" of immunotherapy, in the sense that it represents one of the solid tumors showing less response to this type of therapeutic strategy.

Keywords: Pancreatic cancer; adoptive cell transfer; cancer vaccine; immune checkpoint; immunotherapy.

Publication types

  • Review