Vocabulary lesson

As more treatments known as immunotherapies for cancer emerge, here are some terms to know:

Immunotherapy: Forms of treatment that use or boost your own immune system to fight cancer.

T cells: White blood cells that fight disease by tracking and destroying certain infected or abnormal cells.

Checkpoint inhibitors: Immunotherapy drugs that block one path that tumors use to repel an immune attack. The brand Keytruda was used to treat former President Jimmy Carter.

Cellular immunotherapy: A type of immunotherapy using living immune cells that are collected from a patient, grown or modified in a lab, and returned to the patient to continue growing in the body as they track and fight cancer. Also called adoptive cell therapy.

CAR-T cell therapy: A type of cellular immunotherapy that involves genetically engineering a patient's T cells to grow a "chimeric antigen receptor," or CAR, that zeros in on their specific cancer.

Cytokine release syndrome: A common side effect of CAR-T therapy. It's an immune overreaction that can cause fevers, low blood pressure and other symptoms; severe cases can be life-threatening.

Associated Press