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1 ges, which act as important effectors during cancer immunoediting.
2 election process represents one mechanism of cancer immunoediting.
3 sarcomagenesis to investigate the process of cancer immunoediting.
4 oting actions of immunity are referred to as cancer immunoediting.
5 re temporally distinct from IFN-gamma during cancer immunoediting.
6 a broadening of this concept into one termed cancer immunoediting.
7  as a component of a more general process of cancer immunoediting.
8 o identify genes that impact early phases of cancer immunoediting.
9 nomenon related to immune equilibrium during cancer immunoediting.
10                                              Cancer immunoediting(1) is a hallmark of cancer(2) that
11 nogenicity of tumours defines the process of cancer immunoediting(1).
12 ound that innate immune cells could manifest cancer immunoediting activity in the absence of adaptive
13  are key players in the elimination phase of cancer immunoediting, also referred to as cancer immunos
14 ize the historical and experimental basis of cancer immunoediting and discuss its dual roles in promo
15 tially opening new avenues for comprehending cancer immunoediting and enhancing the conversion of col
16 t compares endogenous versus therapy-induced cancer immunoediting and outlines the molecular and cell
17 evelopment of stochastic models that explain cancer immunoediting and tumor-immune co-evolution.
18                                       During cancer immunoediting, cancer cells deregulate cell death
19 01]), and to differentiate between phases of cancer immunoediting concept (odds ratio: 1.17 [95% CI:
20                                              Cancer immunoediting describes the process whereby highl
21 tumorigenesis or in the elimination phase of cancer immunoediting, did not play critical roles in mai
22                                              Cancer immunoediting drives the adaptation of tumor cell
23 esolution and evolution into the three Es of cancer immunoediting--elimination, equilibrium, and esca
24 s behaviours which resemble the 'three Es of cancer immunoediting': Equilibrium, Escape, and Eliminat
25                                              Cancer immunoediting explains the dual role by which the
26 and tumor cells interact in a process called cancer immunoediting, giving rise to changes in gene exp
27                                              Cancer immunoediting has been postulated to contribute t
28 articular, the importance of CD8+ T cells in cancer immunoediting has been shown, and more broadly in
29                            The principles of cancer immunoediting have set the foundations for unders
30      We provide experimental support for the cancer immunoediting hypothesis, but we also show that a
31   We also discuss the temporal occurrence of cancer immunoediting in metastases and whether it differ
32  the elimination or the equilibrium phase of cancer immunoediting in the small intestine in this mode
33 nosurveillance constitutes the first step of cancer immunoediting in which developing malignant lesio
34 munosurveillance hypothesis into one termed "cancer immunoediting." In this review, we summarize the
35                                              Cancer immunoediting is a process by which immune cells,
36                                              Cancer immunoediting is a process consisting of three ph
37                           A central tenet of cancer immunoediting is that T-cell recognition of tumou
38                                              Cancer immunoediting is the process whereby immune cells
39                                              Cancer immunoediting is the process whereby the immune s
40                                             'Cancer immunoediting' is a process wherein the immune sy
41 munity to control and shape cancer, that is, cancer immunoediting, is the result of three processes t
42 es in immune function that accumulate during cancer immunoediting lead to a progressive escape from h
43                     We also demonstrate that cancer immunoediting of d42m1 occurs via a T-cell-depend
44 upporting the existence of each of the three cancer immunoediting phases.
45  interferons are important components of the cancer immunoediting process and function in a way that
46 imental and human clinical data supporting a cancer immunoediting process that provide the fundamenta
47 anced our understanding of each phase of the cancer immunoediting process, summarizes the discovery o
48 evade or dampen the immune system during the cancer immunoediting process.
49 However, many questions about the process of cancer immunoediting remain unanswered, in part because
50                                       During cancer immunoediting, the ability of the tumor to escape
51                                       During cancer immunoediting, the host immune system shapes tumo
52                                              Cancer immunoediting, the process by which the immune sy
53                                              Cancer immunoediting, the process by which the immune sy
54                                     Although cancer immunoediting was first demonstrated using mouse
55 cuss a unifying conceptual framework called "cancer immunoediting," which integrates the immune syste
56 nderstanding of this dynamic process, called cancer immunoediting, will provide important insights in