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In patients with an ovarian cancer, the treatment is currently based on surgery and chemotherapy.
The impact of chemotherapy on the expansion and functional abilities of Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells has never been evaluated.
The long term goal is to give a rational to combine conventional treatment of ovarian cancer with immunotherapy based on Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells.
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Ovarian cancer is associated with a high mortality rate. Treatment of ovarian cancer is currently based on surgery and chemotherapy.
The first surgery is a radical surgical procedure aiming to achieve no residual disease. Patients who could not benefit from the first surgery may be offered neoadjuvant chemotherapy with a new surgical procedure after 3 or 6 chemotherapy cycles. Chemotherapy is currently based on Taxol and Carboplatin. Immunotherapy based on Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells could provide a promising therapeutic strategy, however, the impact of chemotherapy on the expansion and functional abilities of Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells has never been evaluated.
We want to study the effect of chemotherapy of ovarian cancer on Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells rates in the peripheral blood of patients with ovarian cancer.
Functional abilities of the Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells will be studied: expansion after chemotherapy and their cytotoxic abilities in an autologous context before or after chemotherapy.
The long term goal is to give a rational to combine conventional treatment of ovarian cancer with non-conventional treatment such as immunotherapy based on Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells.
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