• Profile
Close

Research uncovers new potential target for ovarian cancer therapies

MedicalXpress Breaking News-and-Events Mar 07, 2021

Promoting gamma delta T cell response could be an effective strategy for treating advanced ovarian cancer, according to research by an international team from Karolinska Institutet, Menoufia University in Egypt, and the Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden. Their work has been published in Science Translational Medicine.

There are fewer than 250,000 cases of ovarian cancer in the U.S. each year. However, early stage ovarian cancer is often symptomless, and symptoms that arise in later stages are often nonspecific—nausea, weight loss, or abdominal pain. Further complicating the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer is a common secondary condition called ascites, or accumulated fluid in the abdomen that causes swelling and transports cancerous cells to other parts of the body. For these reasons, ovarian cancer can proliferate undiagnosed until it has spread to other organs (metastasized), at which point it becomes very difficult to treat and is often fatal.

In order to improve any treatment, it needs to be specific to the disease it hopes to combat. Currently, we know that ovarian cancer is often responsive to injections of tumor-infiltrating immune cells (TIIC) directly into cancerous masses—cancer immunotherapy, for short. But immunotherapy has limited efficacy because we have not fully isolated the therapeutic TIICs that work for different cancers. That's the focus of this collaborative research, led by Dr. Emelie Foord, Department of Clinical Science, Intervention and Technology at Karolinska Institutet and lead author of the study. Speaking to Medical Xpress, Dr. Foord explained the study's goals and results: "Basically, we looked into a subset of immune cells called gamma delta (gd) T cells. They can have dual roles in cancer," she explains. "Some ... act pro-tumor by the production of IL-17,"—Interleukin 17, linked to many diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, psoriasis, multiple sclerosis and antitumour immunity. "Others," she continues, are "important anti-tumor fighters with various important functions including cytotoxicity and helping other immune cells."

This dual role is one of the complicating factors in cancer therapies; what works for one type of cancer—say, melanoma—could be ineffective or exacerbating in a different cancer such as leukemia or glioblastoma. In order to determine whether promoting a gamma delta T cell response is beneficial or harmful in ovarian cancer, Dr. Foord and her team tested ovarian cancer patients through three samples: blood, ascites fluid, and tumor tissue. The samples then underwent T cell receptor sequencing (TCR-seq), a process that reads the T cell repertoire for specific biomarkers. These results act as a sort of molecular tagging system for which antigens a T cell can identify—and for the purposes of this study, how the samples would react to gamma delta T cell infiltration.

"We found these cells to be beneficial in ovarian cancer," Dr. Foord says, thanks to their "lack of production of pro-tumor cytokines" and "anti-tumor functions, including ... cytotoxicity. Interestingly, we also found the gd T cells to be acting in different ways in ascites fluid and tumors of the patients, where they act in adaptive-like and innate-like ways respectively." This is important, Dr. Foord explains, because it "opens up interesting possibilities and future directions of exploring the enhancement of functionality to increase survival of patients. Our findings of course need verification in additional studies, but nonetheless contribute more knowledge on this subset in human cancer," Dr. Foord adds, "which is highly needed."

—Adrienne Williamson , Medical Xpress

Go to Original
Only Doctors with an M3 India account can read this article. Sign up for free or login with your existing account.
4 reasons why Doctors love M3 India
  • Exclusive Write-ups & Webinars by KOLs

  • Nonloggedininfinity icon
    Daily Quiz by specialty
  • Nonloggedinlock icon
    Paid Market Research Surveys
  • Case discussions, News & Journals' summaries
Sign-up / Log In
x
M3 app logo
Choose easy access to M3 India from your mobile!


M3 instruc arrow
Add M3 India to your Home screen
Tap  Chrome menu  and select "Add to Home screen" to pin the M3 India App to your Home screen
Okay