Cancers (Oct 2021)

The Race of CAR Therapies: CAR-NK Cells for Fighting B-Cell Hematological Cancers

  • Lara Herrera,
  • Silvia Santos,
  • Miguel Angel Vesga,
  • Tomas Carrascosa,
  • Juan Carlos Garcia-Ruiz,
  • Antonio Pérez-Martínez,
  • Manel Juan,
  • Cristina Eguizabal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215418
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 21
p. 5418

Abstract

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Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) are the most common leukemias in children and elderly people, respectively. Standard therapies, such as chemotherapy, are only effective in 40% of ALL adult patients with a five-year survival rate and therefore new alternatives need to be used, such as immunotherapy targeting specific receptors of malignant cells. Among all the options, CAR (Chimeric antigen receptor)-based therapy has arisen as a new opportunity for refractory or relapsed hematological cancer patients. CARs were designed to be used along with T lymphocytes, creating CAR-T cells, but they are presenting such encouraging results that they are already in use as drugs. Nonetheless, their side-effects and the fact that it is not possible to infuse an allogenic CAR-T product without causing graft-versus-host-disease, have meant using a different cell source to solve these problems, such as Natural Killer (NK) cells. Although CAR-based treatment is a high-speed race led by CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells are slowly (but surely) consolidating their position; their demonstrated efficacy and the lack of undesirable side-effects is opening a new door for CAR-based treatments. CAR-NKs are now in the field to stay.

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