The study, published in the American Thoracic Sociery's American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, tested vaccines that help combine a patient's own dentritic cells with an antigen from the mesothelioma, producing a direct T-cell response to the growing disease.
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While initial results are promising, researchers still hope to solve other problems generated by the disease, most notably a suppression of the immune system that can lead to other serious conditions.
"We hope that by further development of our method it will be possible to increase survival in patients with mesothelioma and eventually vaccinate persons who have been in contact with asbestos to prevent them from getting asbestos-related diseases," Dr. Joachim G. Aerts, one of the study's authors, told Asbestos.com.