
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Could destructive, invasive, and often ineffective cancer treatments like surgery and chemotherapy be replaced with a vaccine?
Tune in for the answer, and to discover:
Brendon Coventry is an associate professor of surgery and medical researcher from Adelaide, South Australia. Splitting his time between the clinic and the lab, Coventry stresses the importance of true translational work, and encourages increased funding for it.
He explains how he became interested in studying immunology early on in his education, when he discovered phagocytosis and the immune surveillance hypothesis of cancer. He also discusses how all cancer therapies—surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy—interact with the immune system, revealing a new understanding of cancer and the therapies most commonly used to treat it.
This ties into Coventry's more recent work on vaccines as a therapeutic for cancer. He refers to these vaccines as complex or "dirty" rather than pure. In fact, he says the purer the vaccine, the less effective at treating cancer.
Coventry shares a story of the effectiveness of a particular vaccine in treating a patient with multiple recurring melanomas, and a small study which showed very promising results in cancer patients who received vaccine therapy.
At this point, his efforts are focused on developing a better understanding of why and how vaccines might effectively treat cancer, hoping that this could potentially lead to the development of more selective, effective vaccines for this purpose.
Press play for the full conversation. Episode also available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/30PvU9C Here are the links to some of the papers that Brendon Coventry mentioned in the Podcast: Coventry Vaccines August 2019 2515135519862234 Coventry VMCL JITC 2014 2051-1426-2-9 Coventry_CMAR-76163-long-term-survival-in-advanced-melanoma-patients-using-repea_042915-2 Immune Evolution & Cancer 2021 971412da-1bdd-48d3-b258-a1648862b96f_6718_-_brendon_coventry_v3
By Richard Jacobs4.2
494494 ratings
Could destructive, invasive, and often ineffective cancer treatments like surgery and chemotherapy be replaced with a vaccine?
Tune in for the answer, and to discover:
Brendon Coventry is an associate professor of surgery and medical researcher from Adelaide, South Australia. Splitting his time between the clinic and the lab, Coventry stresses the importance of true translational work, and encourages increased funding for it.
He explains how he became interested in studying immunology early on in his education, when he discovered phagocytosis and the immune surveillance hypothesis of cancer. He also discusses how all cancer therapies—surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy—interact with the immune system, revealing a new understanding of cancer and the therapies most commonly used to treat it.
This ties into Coventry's more recent work on vaccines as a therapeutic for cancer. He refers to these vaccines as complex or "dirty" rather than pure. In fact, he says the purer the vaccine, the less effective at treating cancer.
Coventry shares a story of the effectiveness of a particular vaccine in treating a patient with multiple recurring melanomas, and a small study which showed very promising results in cancer patients who received vaccine therapy.
At this point, his efforts are focused on developing a better understanding of why and how vaccines might effectively treat cancer, hoping that this could potentially lead to the development of more selective, effective vaccines for this purpose.
Press play for the full conversation. Episode also available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/30PvU9C Here are the links to some of the papers that Brendon Coventry mentioned in the Podcast: Coventry Vaccines August 2019 2515135519862234 Coventry VMCL JITC 2014 2051-1426-2-9 Coventry_CMAR-76163-long-term-survival-in-advanced-melanoma-patients-using-repea_042915-2 Immune Evolution & Cancer 2021 971412da-1bdd-48d3-b258-a1648862b96f_6718_-_brendon_coventry_v3

779 Listeners

367 Listeners

1,875 Listeners

7,216 Listeners

5,007 Listeners

1,542 Listeners

1,926 Listeners

1,733 Listeners

3,470 Listeners

9,194 Listeners

1,096 Listeners

847 Listeners

521 Listeners

300 Listeners

29,272 Listeners