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Applying dosing schedules to the clinical protocols of combinatorial therapy, we can optimize the clinical outcome 4-14-2010
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The Making of an Immune Response using Anti-CTLA-4 Blockade with Interluekin 2
There is one missing link in all of this. The "DANGER SIGNAL"
How do we generate the Danger Signal so our immune system knows that there are foreign invaders (Melanoma Cancer cells)are present? I have been researching this for quite some time now. I call it the "Missing Link". Bristol Myer Squibb thinks that their Ipilimumab can be used as a monotherapy, but they are mistaken. They want you to believe that their drug is doing all the work but behind the sences there is real Biochemistry taking place. Interluekin-2 is one of the most important players in this Orchestra.
In the next couple of weeks I will elaborate on my theory of the Danger Signal and reveal the pieces of the puzzle that i have discovered in my research.
But for now, let the light shine on Ipilimumab, (anti-CTLA-4 blockade) from Bristol Myer Squibb
“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.”
~Charles Darwin~
Take Care,
Jimmy B
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