Oxford University Press's
Academic Insights for the Thinking World

  • Author: Spencer Martin

Immunogenic mutations: Cancer’s Achilles heel

In the 1890s, a surgical oncologist named William Coley first attempted to harness the immune system to fight cancer. He injected a mixture of bacterial strains into patient tumors, and occasionally, the tumors disappeared. The treatment was termed “Coley’s Toxins,” and although treatments only rarely resolved cancer cases, it launched a long investigation into anti-tumor immunity.

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