PLoS Biology (Oct 2018)

Is adaptive therapy natural?

  • Frédéric Thomas,
  • Emmanuel Donnadieu,
  • Guillaume M Charriere,
  • Camille Jacqueline,
  • Aurélie Tasiemski,
  • Pascal Pujol,
  • François Renaud,
  • Benjamin Roche,
  • Rodrigo Hamede,
  • Joel Brown,
  • Robert Gatenby,
  • Beata Ujvari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2007066
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. e2007066

Abstract

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Research suggests that progression-free survival can be prolonged by integrating evolutionary principles into clinical cancer treatment protocols. The goal is to prevent or slow the proliferation of resistant malignant cell populations. The logic behind this therapy relies on ecological and evolutionary processes. These same processes would be available to natural selection in decreasing the probability of an organism's death due to cancer. We propose that organisms' anticancer adaptions include not only ones for preventing cancer but also ones for directing and retarding the evolution of life-threatening cancer cells. We term this last strategy natural adaptive therapy (NAT). The body's NAT might include a lower than otherwise possible immune response. A restrained immune response might forego maximum short-term kill rates. Restraint would forestall immune-resistant cancer cells and produce long-term durable control of the cancer population. Here, we define, develop, and explore the possibility of NAT. The discovery of NAT mechanisms could identify new strategies in tumor prevention and treatments. Furthermore, we discuss the potential risks of immunotherapies that force the immune system to ramp up the short-term kill rates of malignant cancer cells in a manner that undermines the body's NAT and accelerates the evolution of immune resistance.