In the fight against cancer, one revolutionary approach is changing everything—immunotherapy.
Instead of attacking cancer with chemicals or radiation, what if we could train your own immune system to recognize and destroy cancer cells? Sounds like science fiction, right? It’s not. This is the reality of modern cancer immunotherapy, and the breakthroughs in recent years are nothing short of game-changing.
Immunotherapy is a biological treatment that helps your immune system detect and attack cancer cells more effectively. Unlike chemotherapy, which kills both healthy and cancerous cells, immunotherapy aims to target only the bad guys, making it less toxic and more precise.
Types of immunotherapy include:
Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-cell therapy, or CAR-T, is one of the biggest buzzwords in oncology. In this treatment, a patient’s own T-cells are engineered to fight specific cancer cells.
What’s new?
CAR-T was once used mostly for blood cancers like leukemia and lymphoma. Now, clinical trials are expanding into solid tumors—including lung, breast, and pancreatic cancers.
Checkpoint inhibitors (like Keytruda or Opdivo) block the “brakes” on immune cells, letting them attack tumors.
What’s new?
They’ve shown success in previously hard-to-treat cancers like melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, kidney cancer, and now triple-negative breast cancer too.
Imagine a vaccine tailored just for your tumor. That’s what neoantigen vaccines aim to do—train the immune system to recognize and destroy the specific mutations in your cancer.
What’s new?
Early trials in pancreatic and colorectal cancers show that patients respond better when vaccines are paired with checkpoint inhibitors.
Known as the abscopal effect, radiation not only kills tumors but also helps release cancer antigens that the immune system can recognize—enhancing the impact of immunotherapy.
What’s new?
Ongoing studies show synergistic results in metastatic melanoma and advanced lung cancers.
While promising, immunotherapy isn’t yet a cure-all. Not all cancer types respond equally, and treatment may depend on:
But for many patients, it offers new hope where few options once existed.
Always speak to your oncologist about whether immunotherapy is an option for your specific case.
Dr. Pritam and his team specialize in precision oncology, using the latest immunotherapy techniques to create personalized treatment plans for each patient. Book an consultation now!