The immune response to cancer
The immune system is our natural defense against disease. It destroys harmful bacteria and viruses that enter our bodies. In order to do this it has to recognize and label them as “foreign”. Once this happens, special types of cells in the immune system move in and destroy the invaders.
Our natural immune system can also detect cancer, because cancer cells are different from normal cells. In many cases, it will destroy these cancer cells before they turn into a detectable cancer.
Helping the immune system fight cancer
Sometimes our immune response to cancer fails and the cancer continues to grow. This can happen when cancer cells are not recognized by the immune system, or develop ways to cheat the system and escape detection. As a result, our immune system mistakes them for healthy cells and does not react.
Cancer immunotherapy aims to teach our natural defenses to identify cancer cells correctly – and then kill them. There are different types of cancer immunotherapy, including cancer vaccines and a treatment called ASCI*.

