Mapping the landscape: a bibliometric study of global chimeric antigen receptor T cell immunotherapy research
Mapping the landscape: a bibliometric study of global chimeric antigen receptor T cell immunotherapy research

Mapping the landscape: a bibliometric study of global chimeric antigen receptor T cell immunotherapy research

Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 2024 Jul 2. doi: 10.1007/s00210-024-03258-6. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

The rise of immunotherapy provided new approaches to cancer treatment. We aimed to describe the contribution of chimeric antigen receptor T cell immunotherapy to future prospects. We analyzed 8035 articles from the Web of Science Core Collection with CiteSpace that covered with various aspects with countries, institutions, authors, co-cited authors, journals, keywords, and references. The USA was the most prolific country, with the University of Pennsylvania being the most published institution. Among individual authors, June Carl H published the most articles, while Maude SL was the most frequently co-cited author. “Blood” emerged as the most cited journal. Keyword clustering revealed six core themes: “Expression,” “Chimeric Antigen Receptor,” “Tumor Microenvironment,” “Blinatumomab,” “Multiple Myeloma,” and “Cytokine Release Syndrome.” In the process of researching the timeline chart of keywords and references, “Large B-cell lymphoma” was located on the right side of the timeline. In the keyword prominence analysis, we found that the keywords “biomarkers,” “pd-1,” “antibody drug conjugate,” “BCMA,” and “chimeric antigen” had high explosive intensity in the recent past. We found that in terms of related diseases, “large B-cell lymphoma” and “cytokine release syndrome” are still difficult problems in the future. In the study of therapeutic methods, “BCMA,” “PD-1,” “chimeric antigen,” and “antibody drug conjugate” deserve more attention from researchers in the future.

PMID:38953967 | DOI:10.1007/s00210-024-03258-6