From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An antigen-presenting cell vaccine, or an APC vaccine, is a vaccine made of antigens and antigen-presenting cells (APCs).

As of March 2019, the only APC vaccine approved by the American Food and Drug Administration is for prostatic acid phosphatase, a commonly over-expressed prostate cancer antigen. [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ O'Neill, David W. (November 2010). "Dendritic cells and T cells in immunotherapy". Journal of Drugs in Dermatology: JDD. 9 (11): 1383–1392. ISSN  1545-9616. PMID  21061761.
  2. ^ Marc S. Ernstoff; Igor Puzanov; Caroline Robert; Adi M. Diab; Peter M. Hersey (2019-03-15). SITC's Guide to Managing Immunotherapy Toxicity. Springer Publishing Company. pp. xviii. ISBN  978-0-8261-7215-0.

External links

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from Dictionary of Cancer Terms. U.S. National Cancer Institute.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An antigen-presenting cell vaccine, or an APC vaccine, is a vaccine made of antigens and antigen-presenting cells (APCs).

As of March 2019, the only APC vaccine approved by the American Food and Drug Administration is for prostatic acid phosphatase, a commonly over-expressed prostate cancer antigen. [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ O'Neill, David W. (November 2010). "Dendritic cells and T cells in immunotherapy". Journal of Drugs in Dermatology: JDD. 9 (11): 1383–1392. ISSN  1545-9616. PMID  21061761.
  2. ^ Marc S. Ernstoff; Igor Puzanov; Caroline Robert; Adi M. Diab; Peter M. Hersey (2019-03-15). SITC's Guide to Managing Immunotherapy Toxicity. Springer Publishing Company. pp. xviii. ISBN  978-0-8261-7215-0.

External links

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from Dictionary of Cancer Terms. U.S. National Cancer Institute.



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