Obesity has reached global epidemic proportions and its effects on interactions between the immune system and malignancies, particularly as related to cancer immunotherapy outcomes, have come under increasing scrutiny. Although the vast majority of pre-clinical murine studies suggest that host obesity should have detrimental effects on anti-tumor immunity and cancer immunotherapy outcomes, the opposite has been found in multiple retrospective human studies. As a result, acceptance of the “obesity paradox” paradigm, wherein obesity increases cancer risk but then improves patient outcomes, has become widespread. However, results to the contrary do exist and the biological mechanisms that promote beneficial obesity-associated outcomes remain u...
Background: In human populations, a certain amount of data correlate obesity/body mass index (BMI) w...
A series of evidence demonstrated that obesity represents an established risk factor for an increase...
Background: Obesity has been associated with improved response to immunotherapy in cancer patients. ...
Background Obesity is a major risk factor for renal cancer, yet our understanding of its effects on ...
Cancer immunotherapy has been heralded as a breakthrough cancer treatment demonstrating tremendous s...
The recent successes of immunotherapy have shifted the paradigm in cancer treatment, but because onl...
Obesity, whose prevalence is pandemic and continuing to increase, is a major preventable and modifia...
Understanding the effects of obesity on the immune profile of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients is...
Immunotherapy has achieved breakthrough status in many advanced stage malignancies and is rapidly be...
Currently, obesity is one of the biggest health burdens facing society because it causes several com...
Expert Summary The obesity paradox of some cancers remains an elusive phenomenon. Sanchez and collea...
Obesity is a well-known risk factor for renal cell carcinoma (RCC) development. However, the RCC–obe...
Although obesity increases the risk of renal cell carcinoma (RCC), obese patients with RCC experienc...
Obesity is one of the leading risk factors for developing renal cell carcinoma, an immuno-genic tumo...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2014. Major:Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Bio...
Background: In human populations, a certain amount of data correlate obesity/body mass index (BMI) w...
A series of evidence demonstrated that obesity represents an established risk factor for an increase...
Background: Obesity has been associated with improved response to immunotherapy in cancer patients. ...
Background Obesity is a major risk factor for renal cancer, yet our understanding of its effects on ...
Cancer immunotherapy has been heralded as a breakthrough cancer treatment demonstrating tremendous s...
The recent successes of immunotherapy have shifted the paradigm in cancer treatment, but because onl...
Obesity, whose prevalence is pandemic and continuing to increase, is a major preventable and modifia...
Understanding the effects of obesity on the immune profile of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients is...
Immunotherapy has achieved breakthrough status in many advanced stage malignancies and is rapidly be...
Currently, obesity is one of the biggest health burdens facing society because it causes several com...
Expert Summary The obesity paradox of some cancers remains an elusive phenomenon. Sanchez and collea...
Obesity is a well-known risk factor for renal cell carcinoma (RCC) development. However, the RCC–obe...
Although obesity increases the risk of renal cell carcinoma (RCC), obese patients with RCC experienc...
Obesity is one of the leading risk factors for developing renal cell carcinoma, an immuno-genic tumo...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2014. Major:Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Bio...
Background: In human populations, a certain amount of data correlate obesity/body mass index (BMI) w...
A series of evidence demonstrated that obesity represents an established risk factor for an increase...
Background: Obesity has been associated with improved response to immunotherapy in cancer patients. ...