There are many types of biological therapy used to treat cancer. They include:
- Nonspecific immunomodulating agents
- Colony-stimulating factors
- Immune checkpoint inhibitors
- Monoclonal antibodies
- Vaccine therapy
- CAR T-cell therapy
- Oncolytic viruses
Read below to learn more about each type.
Nonspecific immunomodulating agents
These medicines boost the immune system in a general way. The two types often used to treat cancer are:
- Interferons. Interferons are a natural type of biological response modifier (BRM) in the body. They are also made in the lab. They improve the way the immune system acts against some kinds of cancer cells. The medicine may work directly on cancer cells to slow their growth. Some interferons may also tell white blood cells to fight cancer cells.
- Interleukins. These are proteins called cytokines. They are naturally in the body. They can also be made in a lab. They boost the growth and activity of many immune cells. This can help the immune cells destroy cancer cells.
Colony-stimulating factors
These medicines help stem cells in the bone marrow make more white blood cells. White blood cells are part of your immune system. They help you fight off germs. Chemo and other cancer treatments slow the bone marrow’s process for making new white blood cells. This puts you more at risk for infections.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors
These are medicines that work by blocking checkpoint proteins on cells from binding with partner proteins on tumor cells. This prevents a signal to be sent to put the brakes on the immune system response. This allows tumor cells to be killed by the immune system.
Monoclonal antibodies
These are medicines that stick to certain parts of cancer cells. These medicines are made in a lab. Some of these antibodies work by tagging cancer cells. This helps them to be found and killed by parts of the immune system. Others work by stopping some functions that cancer cells need to survive. In some cases, the antibodies are attached to another substance. This may be another anticancer medicine, a radioactive substance, or another BRM. When the antibodies attach to cancer cells, they send the other substance into the cancer. This helps to destroy the cancer cells.
Vaccine therapy
Vaccine therapy is a growing area of cancer research. Vaccine therapy may help the body's immune system start attacking the cancer cells. For infectious illness, such as flu, vaccines are given before the disease starts. But cancer vaccines are given after the disease starts. This is done when the amount of cancer is small. Scientists are testing vaccines for treating many types of cancer. A vaccine may be used with other types of biological therapy.
CAR T-cell therapy
CAR T-cell therapy takes the T cells from a person's blood and changes them in a lab to add a gene for a receptor (chimeric antigen receptor or CAR). This helps the T cells find and destroy cancer cells. The changed T cells are then put back in the person's body. Some people may have chemotherapy before they receive the CAR T-cell infusion. This helps make the CAR T cells more effective.
Oncolytic viruses
This type of treatment uses a virus made in a lab that can selectively multiply and kill tumor cells in certain cancers without harming normal tissues.