Sarah Ford | May 6, 2014
OCRF Research Shows How Ovarian Tumors Elude Immune System
Tumors use numerous mechanisms to escape detection and killing by the immune system. Results from OCRF-funded research, reported May 4, 2014 in the prestigious journal听Nature Medicine, show that ovarian cancer cells (and others) establish a protective barrier that prevents anti-tumor immune responses by using tumor-associated blood vessels to kill immune cells. 听Understanding how this process works is important since ovarian cancer outcomes are directly connected to the infiltration of disease-fighting immune cells (T cells). This finding provides a new understanding how tumors resist infiltration, and provides new therapeutic strategies to overcome this barrier.
Former OCRF Ann Schreiber Mentored Investigator Awardee听听was first author on the paper; OCRF grantee and former Scientific Advisory Committee member听听was senior author of the paper.
鈥淭his work could not have been completed without the support of OCRF and its donors,鈥 said Dr. Motz. 听鈥淲e are grateful for all of OCRF鈥檚 hard work and efforts.鈥
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