Cancer vaccines
Collection : Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 0077-8923 ; . v. 1174 Publié par : Published by Blackwell Pub. on behalf of the New York Academy of Sciences (Boston, MA ) Détails physiques : vi, 121 pages illustrations. ISBN :9781573317597; 1573317594.Type de document | Site actuel | Cote | Statut | Date de retour prévue | Code à barres | Réservations |
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Livre | La bibliothèque des Sciences Médicales et Pharmaceutiques | 616.994061 STE (Parcourir l'étagère) | Disponible | 0000000024554 |
Includes bibliographical references.
Some scientific and organizational challenges in cancer immunology -- The human cancer antigen mesothelin is more efficiently presented to the mouse immune system when targeted to the DEC-205/CD205 receptor on dendritic cells -- Brain tumor immunotherapy with type-1 polarizing strategies -- Harnessing human dendritic cell subsets to design novel vaccines -- Dendritic cell-based vaccines for pancreatic cancer and melanoma -- Combining conventional therapies with intratumoral injection of autologous dendritic cells and activated T cells to treat patients with advanced cancers -- Witch hunt against tumor cells enhanced by dendritic cells -- Harnessing CD1D-restricted t cells toward antitumor immunity in humans -- Immunity against cyclin B1 tumor antigen delays development of spontaneous cyclin B1-positive tumors in p53-/- mice -- Targets of protective tumor immunity -- Identification of immunologic biomarkers associated with clinical response after immune-based therapy for cancer -- Harnessing dendritic cells to generate cancer vaccines -- Clinical use of anti-CD25 antibody daclizumab to enhance immune responses to tumor antigen vaccination by targeting regulatory T cells -- Strategies to enhance the therapeutic activity of cancer vaccines: using melanoma as a model -- Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells and the inflammatory response.
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