“…Accordingly, there is growing recognition that the use of perioperative immunotherapies in CRC patients undergoing surgical resection may represent a unique treatment window to prevent metastatic colonization and control minimal residual disease (Badia-Ramentol et al , 2021; Bakos et al , 2018; Horowitz et al , 2015). In this context, interferon-alpha (IFNα), a pleiotropic cytokine with multiple antitumor effects such as the direct inhibition of cancer cell growth and angiogenesis (Indraccolo, 2010), the sustained upregulation of major histocompatibility complexes (Gessani et al , 2014) and the induction of innate and adaptive antitumor immune responses (Aichele et al , 2006; Curtsinger et al , 2007; Fuertes et al , 2013), has been used as adjuvant immunotherapy in various solid cancers such as renal cell carcinoma (Flanigan et al , 2001), melanoma (Lens & Dawes, 2002) and colorectal cancer (Kohne et al , 1997; Link et al , 2005). Unfortunately, systemic administration of IFNα has shown limited clinical efficacy, likely due to its short plasma half-life (∼1 hour) (Bocci, 1994) and the use of high and pulsed doses, which often resulted in systemic side effects (Weber et al , 2015).…”