New Breakthrough in Cancer Immunotherapy Research

Eindhoven University of Technology

Within an international collaboration of thirty scientists TU/e professors Jan van Hest and Willem Mulder are working on nanotechnological research to accurately stimulate the immune system. The TU/e team is focusing on the behavior of polymersomes that accumulate in the spleen and are taken up by special white blood cells.

Jan van Hest. Photo: Vincent van den Hoogen
Jan van Hest. Photo: Vincent van den Hoogen

The latest generation of cancer drugs uses immunotherapy. A promising strategy is to block signals that inhibit the immune system, thereby eliminating tumor cells. This works quite well, but it can bring unpleasant or even dangerous side effects for the patient when the brakes on the immune system are released too much or for too long. Therefore, an international collaboration of over thirty scientists, each with their own expertise, is working on stimulating the immune system in the right place and at the right time. They activated white blood cells of the innate immune system in the spleen, an important organ in our immune system.

Annelies Wauters.
Annelies Wauters.

Complete understanding of action of particles

The research by TU/e scientists dr. Annelies Wauters and PhD candidate Jari Scheerstra, led by Professors Jan van Hest and Willem Mulder, focused on developing nanoparticles made of biodegradable polymers, called polymersomes. In the lab, they have detailed and categorized the behavior of different variants of polymersomes based on their efficacy. Willem Mulder, Professor of Precision Medicine at both Radboud UMC and TU/e: "This is a textbook example of how nanomedicine should be conducted, with a complete understanding of the mechanism of action of particles in an in vivo situation"

Willem Mulder.
Willem Mulder.

It turns out that spherical polymersomes quickly accumulate in the spleen and are taken up there by special white blood cells. Moreover, animal tests have shown that these polymersomes can deliver cancer drugs to these white blood cells in the spleen, upon which the cells become activated and contribute significantly to the elimination of the tumor. Jan van Hest, Professor of Bio-organic Chemistry at TU/e: "It is fantastic that with more than thirty authors, spread across the world, we have achieved this result, with each participating group contributing a part of the expertise."

Hope for a new generation of cancer medication

The logical next step in this work is to further develop this new immunotherapy, which targets white blood cells of the innate immune system, into a new treatment method for cancer. This work still needs to begin, but the current results give hope that in twenty years there will be a new generation of cancer medication that is both more effective and safer for the patient.

Read the scientific article in Nature Nanotechnology.

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