| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11025474 | World Neurosurgery | 2018 | 14 Pages | 
Abstract
												Glioblastoma is a highly aggressive neoplasm with an extremely poor prognosis. Despite maximal gross resection and chemoradiotherapy, these grade IV astrocytomas consistently recur. Glioblastoma cells exhibit numerous pathogenic mechanisms to decrease tumor immunogenicity while promoting gliomagenesis, which manifests clinically as a median survival of less than 2 years and few long-term survivors. Recent clinical trials of vaccine-based immunotherapeutics against glioblastoma have demonstrated encouraging results in prolonging progression-free survival and overall survival. Several vaccine-based treatments have been trialed, such as peptide and heat-shock proteins, dendritic cell-based vaccines, and viral-based immunotherapy. In this literature review, we discuss the immunobiology of glioblastoma, significant current and completed vaccine-based immunotherapy clinical trials, and broad clinical challenges and future directions of glioblastoma vaccine-based immunotherapeutics.
											Keywords
												GAAIL-13Rα2Tumor-specific antigenT-regsTGF-βHuman leukocyte antigen class IHLA-ITMZWT-1pp65GSCEGFRvIIIGBMAPCHspTAATSAPFsClinical trialstumor-associated antigenantigen-presenting cellMRIImmunotherapeuticimmunotherapyprogression-free survivaloverall survivaltransforming growth factor-βMagnetic resonance imagingTemozolomideCNSBBBBlood–brain barrierDendritic cellT-regulatory cellscytomegalovirusCMVcentral nervous systemRANOCerebrospinal fluidCSFmajor histocompatibility complexMHCBrain neoplasmVaccineheat-shock proteinGlioblastoma
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											Authors
												Joshua A. Cuoco, Michael J. Benko, Christopher M. Busch, Cara M. Rogers, Joshua T. Prickett, Eric A. Marvin, 
											