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Tumour immune cells could aid cancer therapies

A pioneering technique designed to identify the range of immune cells in a tumour could speed the development of cancer treatments.

Microscope image of cancer cells.

A pioneering technique designed to spot differences between immune cells in tumours could speed the development of cancer treatments, research at The Roslin Institute and the Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine suggests.

The new approach – based on gene analysis – makes it easier to spot the range of immune cells present in a tumour. These cells could help the body detect and kill cancer when activated by certain drugs.

Future cancer treatments

The approach could be used to help doctors choose the best treatments for individual patients and predict which tumours are likely to respond to a particular therapy.

It could help target the use of immunotherapy – a new form of treatment that uses the body’s own defences to tackle cancer. This therapy has shown great promise in recent years, but identifying which patients will respond best is a challenge for doctors.

Traditional treatments such as radiology do not discriminate between cell types and attack both cancerous and healthy cells, often leading to side-effects. 

Detecting immune cells in a tumour

The team analysed genes from anonymised medical databases of thousands of tumours to identify genes associated with immune cells. This allowed them to quickly detect immune cells in a tumour based on their genetic code even when they were mixed in with harmful cancerous cells and normal cells.

They say that this resource – called ImSig – paints the best picture of tumours to date and will allow scientists to study how certain immune cell types affect cancer growth.

In future, this could help doctors decide which patients were most likely to respond to immunotherapy, experts say.

Our approach, which helps us to find out exactly what cells make up a tumour is like deciphering which fruits went into making a smoothie. Although more work needs to be done before this could be used to help patients, we believe that this new technique is a step towards better understanding of tumours that could help guide patient treatment.

Professor Tom Freemanstudy lead, The Roslin Institute

The study is published in the journal "Cancer Immunology Research" and was funded by the UK's Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.

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