Immunotherapy differs from targeted therapy in that it is designed to stimulate the patient’s own immune system to destroy cancer cells. Current methods urge generating an immune response against cancer, inside the bladder to prevent bladder cancer or using interferon or cytokine to stimulate the immune system against renal cell carcinoma or melanoma.

Vaccines are also used, such as the Sebulociliti vaccine, and it is formed by taking stem cells, cells that stimulate the immune system, from the patient’s body, loading them with prostate acid phosphatase, and returning them again to the body.

It stimulates the specific immune system against cancerous cells in the prostate…
A bone marrow transplant from a donor is another type of immunotherapy. So that the immune cells produced from the transplanted marrow will attack the cancer cells, and this treatment is called the effect of transplantation against the tumor, and severe side effects may occur in this treatment …