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Bone sarcomas in the immunotherapy era

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue 9, Pages 1955-1972

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bph.14999

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Bone sarcomas primarily occur in children and adolescents, with recent developments focusing on understanding the immune system's role in the oncologic process. Immunotherapies have not shown significant improvements, highlighting the need to improve tumor micro-environment characterization to enhance immune therapeutic responses.
Bone sarcomas are primary bone tumours found mainly in children and adolescents, as osteosarcoma and Ewing's sarcoma, and in adults in their 40s as chondrosarcoma. The last four decades the development of therapeutic approaches was based on drug combinations have shown no real improvement in overall survival. Recently oncoimmunology has allowed a better understand of the crucial role played by the immune system in the oncologic process. This led to clinical trials with the aim of reprogramming the immune system to facilitate cancer cell recognition. Immune infiltrates of bone sarcomas have been characterized and their molecular profiling identified as immune therapeutic targets. Unfortunately, the clinical responses in trials remain anecdotal but highlight the necessity to improve the characterization of tumour micro-environment to unlock the immunotherapeutic response, especially in their paediatric forms. Bone sarcomas have entered the immunotherapy era and here we overview the recent developments in immunotherapies in these sarcomas.

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