Immunomodulators
Immunostimulants & Biological Response Modifiers — Classification, Mechanisms (Non-specific, Cytokines, Checkpoint & mAb Targeting, Vaccines & Adjuvants), Therapeutic Uses in Cancer Immunotherapy, Chronic Infection & Immunodeficiency, and Adverse Effects
Past RGUHS + MPMSU + MUHS · 6
RGUHSJun '24
RGUHSMay '22
RGUHSJun '20
MPMSU2014
MUHSWinter '14
RGUHSOct '10
Introduction & terminology
- Immunomodulator — umbrella term for any agent that alters (up- or down-regulates) the magnitude, quality or specificity of an immune response; this topic focuses on the up-regulating arm.
- Immunostimulant / immunopotentiator — an agent that enhances host immune responsiveness — the primary subject; used in cancer immunotherapy, chronic/refractory infection and immunodeficiency states.
- Biological response modifier (BRM) — a recombinant protein, cytokine or monoclonal/polyclonal antibody that modifies the biological response to tumour cells — combining a direct inhibitory effect on malignant cells with reinforcement of immunological defence (e.g. IFN-α2, IL-2, TNF).
- Immunoadjuvant — a substance co-administered with antigen to amplify the magnitude, quality and duration of the adaptive response by first engaging the innate immune system.
- Directionality, not chemistry, defines the class — blocking an inhibitory checkpoint (PD-1, CTLA-4) stimulates immunity (cancer therapy), whereas blocking a stimulatory cytokine (TNF-α, IL-6) suppresses it (autoimmune disease) — the same molecular toolkit, opposite directions.
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Immunomodulators
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