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Usage Information

Personal tumor antigens in blood malignancies: genomics-directed identification and targeting
Livius Penter, Catherine J. Wu
Livius Penter, Catherine J. Wu
Published January 27, 2020
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2020;130(4):1595-1607. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI129209.
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Review Series

Personal tumor antigens in blood malignancies: genomics-directed identification and targeting

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Abstract

Hematological malignancies have long been at the forefront of the development of novel immune-based treatment strategies. The earliest successful efforts originated from the extensive body of work in the field of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. These efforts laid the foundation for the recent exciting era of cancer immunotherapy, which includes immune checkpoint blockade, personal neoantigen vaccines, and adoptive T cell transfer. At the heart of the specificity of these novel strategies is the recognition of target antigens presented by malignant cells to T cells. Here, we review the advances in systematic identification of minor histocompatibility antigens and neoantigens arising from personal somatic alterations or recurrent driver mutations. These exciting efforts pave the path for the implementation of personalized combinatorial cancer therapy.

Authors

Livius Penter, Catherine J. Wu

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Usage data is cumulative from May 2024 through May 2025.

Usage JCI PMC
Text version 1,282 72
PDF 121 23
Figure 166 2
Table 121 0
Citation downloads 78 0
Totals 1,768 97
Total Views 1,865
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Usage information is collected from two different sources: this site (JCI) and Pubmed Central (PMC). JCI information (compiled daily) shows human readership based on methods we employ to screen out robotic usage. PMC information (aggregated monthly) is also similarly screened of robotic usage.

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