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Oncologist shares how immunotherapy trains your immune system to target and destroy cancer

Immunotherapy is changing how we approach cancer—by using the body’s own defences to attack tumours. It avoids the widespread damage of chemotherapy but comes with its own set of risks. Understand how it works—and who it might actually help

September 17, 2025 / 14:48 IST
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Unlike chemotherapy, which attacks healthy and cancerous cells alike, immunotherapy retrains the immune system to fight tumours more precisely—with fewer side effects. (Image: Pexels)

Do you ever wonder why some cancers go unnoticed for so long? The answer lies in their ability to hide. It’s because cancer disguises itself from the system meant to protect us. Our immune system constantly scans the body for abnormal cells, but cancer learns how to evade detection—releasing chemicals that weaken immune response or mirroring normal cells to avoid being flagged as threats.

Today, cancer treatment is undergoing a revolution. "Instead of relying solely on chemotherapy or radiation, scientists are now turning inward—teaching the body’s immune system to identify and fight cancer cells on its own. It’s called immunotherapy", Dr Abhishek Raj, Senior Consultant and Head of Medical Oncology, Sarvodaya Hospital, Faridabad told Moneycontrol. By boosting or retraining the immune system, immunotherapy helps the body recognise and destroy tumour cells it once ignored.

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Furthermore, unlike chemotherapy, which damages healthy cells alongside cancerous ones, immunotherapy aims to target only the tumour. “ It minimises collateral damage and sometimes offers longer-lasting effects,” Dr Raj told Moneycontrol. The immune system already knows how to protect us—it just needs help remembering how to act when cancer hides.