Combining surgery and immunotherapy: turning an immunosuppressive effect into a therapeutic opportunity

Orneala Bakos(Université de Sherbrooke), Christine Lawson(Université de Sherbrooke), Samuel G. Rouleau(Université de Sherbrooke), Lee‐Hwa Tai(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke)
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
September 3, 2018
Cited by 185Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cancer surgery is necessary and life-saving. However, the majority of patients develop postoperative recurrence and metastasis, which are the main causes of cancer-related deaths. The postoperative stress response encompasses a broad set of physiological changes that have evolved to safeguard the host following major tissue trauma. These stress responses, however, intersect with cellular mediators and signaling pathways that contribute to cancer proliferation. MAIN: Previous descriptive and emerging mechanistic studies suggest that the surgery-induced prometastatic effect is linked to impairment of both innate and adaptive immunity. Existing studies that combine surgery and immunotherapies have revealed that this combination strategy is not straightforward and patients have experienced both therapeutic benefit and drawbacks. This review will specifically assess the immunological pathways that are disrupted by oncologic surgical stress and provide suggestions for rationally combining cancer surgery with immunotherapies to improve immune and treatment outcomes. SHORT CONCLUSION: Given the prevalence of surgery as frontline therapy for solid cancers, the emerging data on postoperative immunosuppression and the rapid development of immunotherapy for oncologic treatment, we believe that future targeted studies of perioperative immunotherapy are warranted.


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