Abstract

Immunotherapy has become a rapidly developing approach in the treatment of cancer. Cancer immunotherapy aims at promoting the immune system response to react against the tumor. In view of this, we develop a mathematical model for immune–tumor interplays with immunotherapeutic drug, and strategies for optimally administering treatment. The tumor–immune dynamics are given by a system of five coupled nonlinear ordinary differential equations which represent the interaction among tumor-specific CD4+T cells, tumor-specific CD8+T cells, tumor cells, dendritic cells and the immuno-stimulatory cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2), extended through the addition of a control function describing the application of a dendritic cell vaccination. Dynamical behavior of the system is studied from the analytical as well as numerical points of view. The main aim is to investigate the treatment regimens which minimize the tumor cell burden and the toxicity of dendritic cell vaccination. Our numerical simulations demonstrate that the optimal treatment strategies using dendritic cell vaccination reduce the tumor cell burden and increase the cell count of CD4+T cells, CD8+T cells, dendritic cells and IL-2. The most influential parameters having significant impacts on the tumor cells are identified by employing the approach of global sensitivity analysis.

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