Poison or Primer?
Companion Explainer · Immuno-Oncology Basics How Chemotherapy Talks to the Immune System Informed Prostate Cancer Support Group (IPCSG) Newsletter · Background piece for members BLUF — Bottom Line Up Front Chemotherapy is cytotoxic — it is, in plain terms, a controlled poison. So it seems backwards that modern regimens increasingly pair it with immune therapies that depend on a healthy immune system. The resolution is that a cytotoxic drug, given at the right dose and the right time, can help an immune attack in three ways: it clears away the cells that suppress immunity, it makes cancer cells easier for immune cells to recognize, and (for some drugs) it opens biological "space" for therapeutic immune cells to expand. The same drug can also interfere — if the dose is too high or badly timed, it wipes out the very immune cells you are counting on. The whole game is dose and sequence, not poison versus medicine. The apparent contradiction For decades, che...