Checkpoint Breaches: Unexpected Effects of Anti-PD-1 Therapy on the Blood-Brain Barrier.

Immune checkpoint inhibitors have revolutionized cancer therapy, and their unintended side effects relate largely to inducing autoimmunity; effects on vascular functions have only rarely been observed so far. In this issue of Cancer Discovery, a puzzling finding is reported that has divergent clinical implications: PD-1 inhibitors make cytotoxic T lymphocytes secrete a Wnt pathway suppressor to the blood that opens the blood-brain barrier, both allowing circulating tumor cells to enter the brain and a chemotherapeutic to better reach tumor cells in brain metastases. See related article by Deo et al., p. 976.
Cancer
Care/Management

Authors

Karreman Karreman, Winkler Winkler
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