について
Immunotherapy is an innovative field of medicine that focuses on harnessing the power of the immune system to prevent, treat, and manage various diseases, particularly cancers and autoimmune disorders. By enhancing or modifying the immune response, immunotherapy aims to target and eliminate diseased cells more effectively than traditional treatments. Researchers in Immunotherapy explore strategies such as checkpoint inhibitors, CAR-T cell therapy, and cancer vaccines to develop more precise and personalized therapeutic approaches.
The study of Immunotherapy integrates insights from immunology, molecular biology, and genetics to optimize immune system responses. This dynamic field is crucial for advancing treatment options for conditions that were previously considered difficult to manage. With ongoing research into areas like immune checkpoint modulation, monoclonal antibodies, and adoptive cell therapies, immunotherapy holds promise for revolutionizing the treatment landscape and significantly improving patient outcomes.
Why publish with us?
Global Visibility – Indexed in major databases
Fast Peer Review – Decision within 14–21 days
Open Access – Maximize readership and citation
Multidisciplinary Scope – Biology, Medicine and Engineering
Editorial Board Excellence – Global experts involved
University Library Indexing – Via OCLC
Permanent Archiving – CrossRef DOI
APC – Affordable APCs with discounts
Citation – High Citation Potential
現在トレンドになっている記事はどれですか?
研究論文
- Application of Virtual Reality (VR) in Facility Management Competency-based Training (CBT) in the Era of Industrie 5.0
- Efficient Room Temperature Ethanol Vapor Sensing by Unique Fractal Features of Tin Oxide
- Federated Learning- Hope and Scope
- Efficacy of Different Concentrations of Insect Growth Regulators (IGRs) on Maize Stem Borer Infestation
- Adaptation of the Physical Literacy Scale for Adults into Turkish and Examination of its Psychometric Properties
- Examining the Causal Connection between Lipid-lowering Medications and Malignant Meningiomas through Drug-target Mendelian Randomization Analysis
Advertisement

