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Review ArticleReviewsR

Therapy Aimed to Suppress the Production of the Immunosuppressive Protein Progesterone Induced Blocking Factor (PIBF) May Provide Palliation and/or Increased Longevity for Patients With a Variety of Different Advanced Cancers – A Review

JEROME H. CHECK and DIANE CHECK
Anticancer Research July 2019, 39 (7) 3365-3372; DOI: https://doi.org/10.21873/anticanres.13479
JEROME H. CHECK
1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, Camden, NJ, U.S.A.
2Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ, U.S.A.
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  • For correspondence: laurie@ccivf.com
DIANE CHECK
2Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Progesterone induced blocking factor (PIBF) is a unique protein that is not present in normal cells, but is found predominantly in rapidly growing cells of the fetal placental unit or cancer cells. There is a larger “parent” form that is a nuclear protein involved in cell to cell regulation, allowing tumor cells to proliferate and invade tissues. The parent compound is cleaved into smaller intracytoplasmic isoforms that can suppress cellular immune response, especially, but not limited to natural killer cells. The progesterone receptor antagonist mifepristone can suppress messenger RNA for PIBF, but can also suppress the intracytoplasmic protein. Treating cancer cell lines, intact animals with a variety of spontaneous cancers, and people with various cancers with mifepristone, has been found to inhibit cancer growth, and provide both palliation of symptoms and longevity possibly by suppressing this unique immunomodulatory protein.

  • Progesterone induced blocking factor
  • immunosuppression
  • progesterone receptor modulators
  • natural killer cells
  • rapidly growing cancer cells
  • immunology of pregnancy
  • review

The Progesterone Induced Blocking Factor (PIBF)

The progesterone induced blocking factor (PIBF) is an immunomodulatory protein that can suppress or block various aspects of the immune system, especially, but not limited to, natural killer (NK) cells (1, 2). Because exposure to progesterone can cause a precipitous rise in expression of this immunomodulatory protein both in gamma/delta lymphocytes and in the serum, it has been termed the progesterone induced blocking factor (3, 4). The blocking effect on cellular immunity, especially NK cell cytolytic activity, may be related, at least in part, to a shift from thymic helper (TH)-1 to TH2 cytokine dominance (5, 6). At least one-way PIBF blocks NK cell cytolytic activity is by inhibiting degranulation of perforin granules, which is one method used by NK cells to kill other cells (7).

There are at least two forms of PIBF. The “parent’ form has a molecular mass of 90 kDa and is localized in the centrosome (8). Various splice variants of this nuclear protein lead to smaller intracytoplasmic molecules that have immunosuppressive activity. For example, one of the most common splice variants has a molecular mass of 35 kDa, results from the exon 1-5 + 17-18 transcript and contains the N-terminal 223 and C-terminal 75 amino acids (8). The actual full-length protein consists of 757 amino acids and the 48-kDa N-terminal part is biologically active (9). This 757-amino acid protein is unique in that it has no significant amino acid sequence homology with any known protein (9). The PIBF gene has been identified on chromosome 13 in the vicinity of breast cancer 1 (BRCA1) or BRCA2 or p53 (8, 10, 11).

PIBF protein is secreted from two main sources. The gamma/delta T-cell seems to be the main source of PIBF found in the serum (6). The serum levels of PBF will rise precipitously in the presence of progesterone (P), even in males (12, 13).

The PIBF protein is also expressed in the cytoplasm of rapidly growing cells (8, 14). For the fetal-placental unit, these include mesenchymal cells, embryonic cells and trophoblast cells (12). Various isoforms of the PIBF protein have been found in cancer cells. The 34-36 kDa splice variant, similar to the PIBF protein circulating in the blood stream found in high levels in people exposed to P, is the most common form (8, 14). However, splice variants of the parent 90-kDa nuclear parent form have been found in the cytoplasm of some cancer cells measuring 57 and 67 kDa (15, 16).

The Effect of Progesterone, Progestins, and Progesterone Receptor Modulators on Serum and Intracytoplasmic PIBF Levels

Whereas exposure to progesterone causes a marked increase in serum PIBF blood levels, synthetic progestins, e.g., medroxyprogesterone acetate, 19-nor testosterone derivatives (as seen in oral contraceptives), dydrogesterone, or even the naturally occurring 17-hydroxyprogesterone fail to raise serum PIBF levels (12, 13, 17). Exposure to progesterone also markedly increases intracytoplasmic PIBF levels and very significantly increases PIBF mRNA levels (14).

In contrast, the progesterone receptor modulators mifepristone and ulipristal do not decrease serum levels of PIBF, showing that progesterone receptors on gamma/delta T-cells are not affected by these selective progesterone receptor modulators (18, 19). However, mifepristone has been demonstrated to suppress intracytoplasmic 35-kDa PIBF protein in a large variety of leukemia cell lines (14). Mifepristone has also been demonstrated to suppress the intracytoplasmic 57 kDa PIBF isoform found in human glioblastoma multiforme cells (20).

The nuclear form of PIBF may be involved in cell growth. The addition of PIBF to a glioblastoma multiforme cell line led to an increase in the number of U87 cells on days 4 and 5 of the treatment, suggesting that PIBF promotes migration and invasion of glioblastoma cancer cells (20). Lachman et al., found PIBF to be highly expressed in cell lines from adenocarcinomas of the cervix, breast (T47D, Sloan Kettering 3 and MCF) and ovary (OVCAR-3) (8). Mifepristone has been found to inhibit the growth of cell lines or murine transplantation from endometrial cancer, breast cancer, prostate cancer, ovarian cancer, and gastric cancer (21-26). Some other cell line studies have shown that mifepristone treatment in combination with cisplatin inhibited growth of ovarian cell lines better than cisplatin alone (27-31).

A Simplified Hypothetical Model of how the Fetal Placental Unit Utilizes PIBF to Evade Immune Rejection of the Fetal Semi-Allograft from Natural Killer (NK) Cells

Many immunosuppressive molecules are needed to inhibit immune rejection of the fetus. Two editorials have provided an insight as to the need to especially suppress NK cells and how PIBF may be the main immunosuppressive protein to accomplish this feat (32, 33).

A simplified model to explain the relationship of NK cells, growth of the fetal placental unit and escape from immune surveillance from NK cells is as follows: Progesterone inhibits the biogenic amine dopamine. One of the functions of dopamine is to inhibit cellular permeability. By suppressing dopamine, irritating elements infuse into the endometrium causing an inflammatory response (32). This inflammatory response leads to an accumulation of NK cells, which represent 70% of the endometrial white cell population (32, 34-37). These NK cells function to chop out the thick walls of some of the uterine arteries to be replaced by a single layer of trophoblast cells shed from the extra-villous trophoblast (32, 36). These new vessels, known as spiral arterioles, are sufficiently thin-walled to allow nutrient exchange from mother to fetus (32, 36).

Trophoblast invasion is directed by uterine NK cells also. They express the chemokines IL-8 and IP-10, which bind the receptors CXCR1 and CXCR3 on the extra-villous trophoblast cells (37). This directs the conceptus to attach to the hole made in the mucin 1 layer coating the endometrium that has precluded attachment of the conceptus for 6 days to allow uterine remodeling (32).

The problem now facing the conceptus, that is invading the re-modeled implantation site, is that these same NK cells, required for these important events in a successful pregnancy, could now attack the fetal semi-allograft and abort the pregnancy. However, this hypothetical model contends that while progesterone was responsible for attracting the NK cells, progesterone has simultaneously been busy establishing a method to negate the ability of NK cells to kill by inhibiting perforin release and possibly granzymes, by increasing the intracytoplasmic concentration of PIBF in the rapidly growing fetal-placental cells (32-34).

Naturally, models for a given physiological state can be modified as new research is performed. Nevertheless, a good present-day model is important in understanding pathological states related to abnormal physiological conditions. Understanding these various models can lead to treatments that can obviate the pathological state.

For example, based on this model, infertility or miscarriage can be related to excessive cellular permeability, leading to excessive NK cells and/or insufficient PIBF to neutralize them. Indeed, based on this model, supplementation with progesterone in the luteal phase and during the first trimester should correct some infertility states, or prevent miscarriage, and, indeed, this supplementation has corrected these pathological states (38-40). Similarly, taking medication that can release more dopamine from sympathetic nerve fibers can diminish excessive permeability, not only leading to amelioration of a large number of treatment refractory pathological states, but can decrease the risk of miscarriage (41-43).

This model would also explain why taking the progesterone receptor modulator mifepristone, for just one day, could lead to subsequent fetal demise in a large number of cases, leading to the use of the 200 mg oral dosage as an abortifacient. Since death is not immediate, the drug would not seem to act as an immediate poison, e.g., stopping heart function, but by causing a cellular immune attack, possibly, predominantly by NK cells, by suppressing intracytoplasmic PIBF in rapidly growing cells of the fetal-placental unit.

Potential Cancer Immunotherapy Based on Similarities of the Mechanisms Shared by the Fetal Placental Unit and Cancer: Animal Research

The possible role of PIBF in enabling both the conceptus and malignant tumor to escape immune surveillance was hypothesized in 2001 (44). With further research, the model was modified shifting the emphasis from PIBF made by circulating gamma/delta T-cells to the cancer cells themselves (45).

Based on the knowledge that the progesterone receptor modulator mifepristone, which is already on the market, can suppress the immunosuppressive function of intracytoplasmic PIBF, and terminate a pregnancy, its effect on cancer progression was examined.

However, not all cancer cell lines expressing PIBF are associated with malignant tumors positive for the classic nuclear progesterone receptor. Also, cell line studies do not take into account the fact that a certain therapeutic agent can be effective through chemical interactions in the intact animal. In choosing animal models, a more credible animal model would be one that evaluates spontaneous cancer, and especially spontaneous cancers that are not associated with the classic nuclear progesterone receptor (46).

Controlled studies gavaging mice with spontaneous cancers, including leukemia, testicular, prostate, and lung cancer with oral mifepristone, calculated on a weight basis to be the equivalent of 200 mg per day for humans, demonstrated significant palliative benefits and increased longevity in these animal models (47-49). For example, for A/J mice with spontaneous lung cancer, 67.4% treated with mifepristone survived 1 year vs. 27% of the controls (49). There were 66.7% of mice treated with mifepristone with no sick days (body conditioning scores <4) vs. zero % for controls (49).

Anecdotal Human Studies Using Mifepristone to Treat Advanced Cancers

Though not approved for cancer therapy, as mentioned, mifepristone is already a manufactured drug used in the 200 mg dosage for inducing therapeutic abortions, and in the 300 mg dosage for hyperglycemia associated with Cushing's syndrome. Although most governments allow off-label prescription of most drugs, in most countries due to consideration of abortion, the 200 mg of mifepristone is used by licensed abortionists. In order to use the 200 mg dosage in the United States, one must obtain a compassion use investigational new drug (IND) approval on a case by case basis.

The following advanced treatment refractory cancers have shown some palliative benefits from oral mifepristone 200 mg per day: colon cancer, glioblastoma multiforme, thymic cell epithelial cell cancer, transitional cell carcinoma of the renal pelvic, pancreatic cancer, malignant fibrous histocytoma, leiomyosarcoma, probable small cell lung cancer, and renal cell carcinoma (50-53).

Actually, all three patients with advanced metastatic colon cancer showed significant palliative benefits taking single agent mifepristone therapy at a dose of 200 mg/day (50, 52). One woman, aged 61 years old, had invasive moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma of the transverse colon with extensive metastases to the liver, peritoneum, ovary and uterus. Her oncologist suggested a chemotherapy regimen and stated that it would increase her chance of survival at 6 months to 15%, but otherwise death would occur within a month or two. Instead, she elected to try single agent oral mifepristone therapy at a dose of 200 mg daily, which was obtained with a compassionate use IND. She was an ECOG-2 at this time. After 5 weeks of mifepristone her energy levels returned to normal, and had total relief of pain. She was now ECOG-0. She was sill perfect at 18 months of treatment, when, because of expense ($500/month), she asked if she could stop the medication. With little experience, it was agreed to stop it, and simply restart the mifepristone if the cancer started to advance again. At that time there still was evidence of metastatic disease, but no lesions had grown, and many were smaller. Her carcinoembryonic analysis was only 1.3 ng/ml. Three months off the drug she developed ascites, though she was still pain-free, and had good energy. The mifepristone was started again, but it did not seem as effective on the second round, and she died 30 months from starting the mifepristone (50).

Another example of a great response to mifepristone 200 mg daily was an 80-year old woman admitted to the intensive care unit with a serum PO2 of 72 mmol/l. The radiologic and clinical diagnosis was probable advanced lung cancer with the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) related to ectopic production of arginine vasopressin (53). The oncologist thought that based on the rapidity of the presentation, and with SIADH, that the most likely diagnosis was advanced small-cell lung cancer. The patient refused surgical confirmation, and refused standard chemotherapy, but agreed to take 200 mg oral mifepristone on a compassionate basis. Within one month her PO2 returned to 99-100 mmHg and her serum sodium returned to 145 mmol/l from 118 mmol/l. Ten weeks after initiation of treatment all her lung lesions were gone by CT scan. Her CT-scan showed no tumors 5 years after single agent mifepristone therapy. She died 5 ½ years after initiation of mifepristone therapy of a sudden myocardial infarction (53). Very good responses have also been seen with thymic cell epithelial cancer and leiomyosarcoma (52).

These cases provided new insight into treatment with this drug. For one thing, as evidenced by the colon cancer and the thymic epithelial cell cancer cases, once one stops the drug, there can be very rapid lethal progression. Thus, the drug seems to stop the cancer from growing, and even showing regression or remission, but the cancer is not eradicated, and the cancer is geared to rapidly progress if the “block” is removed when the progesterone receptor modulator is stopped. Moreover, the leiomyosarcoma case shows that even if the drug is starting to show some progression, it is probably not wise to stop the drug and try another treatment modality, unless this new treatment is very likely to work (52). Disease progression is likely to be so slowed that significant longevity and palliation will still occur as long as the drug is continued even if there appears to be progressive disease.

It should be noted that the 58-year old male with bilateral renal cell carcinoma who refused to remove his left kidney to prevent dialysis, with 3 lesions present, is still alive and doing well 15 years later while being treated with single agent mifepristone (remaining left kidney and remainder of right kidney only removed 11 years later when his diabetes caused complete kidney failure. He has received a kidney transplant) (53).

A phase II study of treatment with oral mifepristone as salvage therapy in patients with advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer who have failed two or more previous chemotherapy or immunotherapy regimens

The benefits of mifepristone therapy in controlled murine cancer models, and some of the dramatic aforementioned responses in anecdotal cases, have convinced the present authors of the efficacy of mifepristone in increasing longevity and/or providing palliation for patients with advanced cancers. However, to convince a large group of oncologists, a larger clinical study is needed, to not only confirm the efficacy of this treatment in some cases, but to determine what percentage of advanced cancer cases will be provided significant palliative benefit from mifepristone therapy.

This study of stage IIIB or IV non-small cell lung cancer was approved for 40 patients and 2 principal investigators. Unable to find willing oncologists to be principal investigators in this investigator-initiated study, the lead author became the sole principal investigator. Based on past experience, the primary end-points were quality of life and longevity, with disease progression as only a secondary endpoint.

The first patient presented at age 68 with stage IV lung cancer with brain metastasis who had failed three platinum-based chemotherapy regimens (46). Since he had no tumor markers for targeted therapy, he was told there were no other treatment options. He was started on 300 mg oral mifepristone daily and has now completed 43 twenty-eight-day treatment cycles. He is still ECOG zero and answers all 43 quality of life questions with “not at all”. Most lesions have regressed or remained stable. One lesion is slowly growing but is showing necrosis. There have been no more brain lesions.

The second patient in the study was a 66-year-old woman. This patient was positive for the epidermal growth receptor (EGFR) mutation and the programmed cell death protein ligand-1 marker (PD-L1) (54). Her non-small cell lung cancer progressed despite platinum-based chemotherapy, erlotinib, and nivolumab. She showed arrest of cancer progression, and significant palliative benefits after 18 months of mifepristone therapy. Unfortunately, she died from pneumonia complicating her end stage chronic obstructive lung disease (54). Her lung cancer had not progressed (54).

Status of Mifepristone Therapy for Advanced Cancer as of 2019

Unfortunately, to date, after almost four years, these are the only two patients with ECOG 3 status or less recruited for this investigator-initiated study. This is partly related to competition for advanced cancer patients to be used in drug trials by various pharmaceutical companies.

Mifepristone, especially in the 200 mg dosage, is generally well tolerated when used long-term, as seen in studies using it for unresectable meningiomas (55). Hopefully, the 2019 publication showing that mifepristone can thwart PD-L1 positive cancer, even when progression occurred despite treatment with check-point inhibitors, will generate interest to offer this treatment, not just to patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, but also to patients suffering from other cancers. Furthermore, interest will be influenced by the aforementioned anecdotal cases, knowledge of which cancer cell lines express the PIBF protein, or knowledge of which spontaneous murine cancers respond to mifepristone. As a generic drug, mifepristone can be obtained in some countries for as little as 50 cents a pill.

In the United States, the FDA has made the methodology to obtain compassionate use much simpler. Hopefully, other governments will merely allow those physicians who are interested in treating their cancer patients with mifepristone to merely prescribe the drug off-label without obtaining an IND. Hopefully, if physicians do prescribe mifepristone, they will keep careful records and report their experiences whether positive or negative. Hopefully positive reports from more than one treatment center will generate interest in performing larger clinical trials, which will examine the efficacy of progesterone receptor modulators for treating cancer.

Also, the hope of writing this review is that it will generate interest in scientists to evaluate in more detail this unique PIBF protein. A computer search found a paucity of research concerning this immunomodulatory protein. There are still so many questions to be answered which could lead to other, possibly superior, cancer therapies.

One question is how cancer cells activate the progesterone receptor, which is probably a membrane associated progesterone receptor, rather than a nuclear receptor (56). Is it possible that some cancers produce human chorionic gonadotropin, which, in turn, produces progesterone locally, which stimulates the membrane associated P receptors, leading to an increase in both nuclear and intracytoplasmic PIBF (38, 46, 57)? Theoretically, this level of P is insufficient to raise the serum progesterone levels, and thus serum PIBF is not increased in the patients with cancer (58-60).

Another important question is at which level does PIBF operate? Could this immunosuppressive protein be critical for cancer stem cell proliferation? This seems plausible since mifepristone, which suppresses intracytoplasmic PIBF, has been shown to cause regression of cancer, or at least significant palliative relief, even when standard therapies directed against rapidly growing cells have ceased to be effective (a time when most theorize that the majority of the cancer cells may be stem cells).

Future studies should be directed at determining which tumors on biopsy express the PIBF protein. Also, will mifepristone only inhibit cancer growth of cells expressing PIBF, or could PIBF expression not be present on the biopsied early stage cancer, but be present when the tumor reaches the rapidly growing metastatic stage? In 2018, Madendag et al. found high immune expression of PIBF in epithelial ovarian cancers (61). They concluded that “further research is needed to understand the clinical importance of this finding, to learn outcomes of high levels of PIBF, and to investigate its underlying mechanisms” (61).

Future studies aimed at eliciting more precisely the effect of intracytoplasmic PIBF on the immune system could help to develop other novel therapies aimed at blocking these pathways, or methods of enhancing the efficacy of progesterone receptor modulators. These intracytoplasmic isoforms of the nuclear PIBF protein may be ligands of various immune pathways, e.g., acting as ligands of the PIBF receptor/interleukin-4 receptor and heterocomplex, e.g., IL-4R/Janus kinase/STAT 6 proliferating pathway which is associated with the differentiation of TH2 cells to produce a specific set of cytokines (62).

As previously mentioned, mifepristone can suppress proliferation of cancer cell lines (23-31). This suppression is not likely through the immune system, since this would require an intact animal. Most likely the mechanism involves suppression of a molecule that inhibits proliferation mediated by the nuclear 90-kDa parental form of the PIBF protein (8, 46). It is likely that the antagonism of mifepristone on cancer cell proliferation would more likely involve nuclear, rather than intracytoplasmic PIBF.

There is evidence that PIBF (most likely nuclear PIBF) may help enable malignant tumors to invade tissues by stimulating proteolytic enzymes, e.g., matrix metalloproteinases (63). Another possible role of mifepristone is to inhibit cytotoxic T-cells from adhering to vascular endothelium (64). In the aforementioned study by Lachman et al., they found that PIBF may not be an integral part of the centrosome but rather a microtubule-associated protein (8). This could suggest that other therapies, in addition to progesterone receptor modulators, could be used to disrupt PIBF function, e.g., microtubule disrupting agents, e.g., nocodazole (8).

Another important question is whether early use of mifepristone, possibly combined with other chemo or immunotherapeutic agents may prove to significantly enhance longevity and quality of life compared to the use of either treatment alone, as seen in certain cell line studies (26-31).

Hopefully, in 2019, we will see a significant increase in scientists and physicians researching the importance of the PIBF protein and the importance of progesterone receptor modulators in the treatment of cancer. One caveat is that, based on experiences to date, clinical studies should make their primary endpoint longevity and quality of life, as opposed to progressive disease, similar to the aforementioned investigator-initiated evaluation of single-agent mifepristone therapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer.

Footnotes

  • Authors' Contributions

    The majority of the manuscript was written by the lead author Jerome H. Check. The section entitled “A phase II study of treatment with oral mifepristone as salvage therapy in patients with advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer who have failed two or more previous chemotherapy or immunotherapy regimens” was written by the co-author, Diane Check.

  • Conflicts of Interest

    The Authors have no conflicts of interest to declare regarding this study.

  • Received April 10, 2019.
  • Revision received June 11, 2019.
  • Accepted June 18, 2019.
  • Copyright© 2019, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved

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Anticancer Research: 39 (7)
Anticancer Research
Vol. 39, Issue 7
July 2019
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Therapy Aimed to Suppress the Production of the Immunosuppressive Protein Progesterone Induced Blocking Factor (PIBF) May Provide Palliation and/or Increased Longevity for Patients With a Variety of Different Advanced Cancers – A Review
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Therapy Aimed to Suppress the Production of the Immunosuppressive Protein Progesterone Induced Blocking Factor (PIBF) May Provide Palliation and/or Increased Longevity for Patients With a Variety of Different Advanced Cancers – A Review
JEROME H. CHECK, DIANE CHECK
Anticancer Research Jul 2019, 39 (7) 3365-3372; DOI: 10.21873/anticanres.13479

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Therapy Aimed to Suppress the Production of the Immunosuppressive Protein Progesterone Induced Blocking Factor (PIBF) May Provide Palliation and/or Increased Longevity for Patients With a Variety of Different Advanced Cancers – A Review
JEROME H. CHECK, DIANE CHECK
Anticancer Research Jul 2019, 39 (7) 3365-3372; DOI: 10.21873/anticanres.13479
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • The Progesterone Induced Blocking Factor (PIBF)
    • The Effect of Progesterone, Progestins, and Progesterone Receptor Modulators on Serum and Intracytoplasmic PIBF Levels
    • A Simplified Hypothetical Model of how the Fetal Placental Unit Utilizes PIBF to Evade Immune Rejection of the Fetal Semi-Allograft from Natural Killer (NK) Cells
    • Potential Cancer Immunotherapy Based on Similarities of the Mechanisms Shared by the Fetal Placental Unit and Cancer: Animal Research
    • Anecdotal Human Studies Using Mifepristone to Treat Advanced Cancers
    • A phase II study of treatment with oral mifepristone as salvage therapy in patients with advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer who have failed two or more previous chemotherapy or immunotherapy regimens
    • Status of Mifepristone Therapy for Advanced Cancer as of 2019
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Keywords

  • Progesterone induced blocking factor
  • immunosuppression
  • progesterone receptor modulators
  • natural killer cells
  • rapidly growing cancer cells
  • immunology of pregnancy
  • review
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