Chemoimmunotherapy
Chemoimmunotherapy is chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy. Chemotherapy uses different drugs to kill or slow the growth of cancer cells; immunotherapy uses treatments to stimulate or restore the ability of the immune system to fight cancer. A common chemoimmunotherapy regimen is CHOP combined with rituximab (CHOP-R) for B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas.
Introduction
References
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- Couzin-Frankel, Jennifer. "Cancer immunotherapy." (2013)
- Chen, Gang, and Leisha A. Emens. "Chemoimmunotherapy: reengineering tumor immunity." Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy (2013).
- Coiffier, Bertrand, et al. "CHOP chemotherapy plus rituximab compared with CHOP alone in elderly patients with diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma." New England Journal of Medicine (2002).
- Slamon, Dennis J., et al. "Use of chemotherapy plus a monoclonal antibody against HER2 for metastatic breast cancer that overexpresses HER2." New England Journal of Medicine (2001).
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