| Literature DB >> 22623917 |
Tony A Koehn1, Lori L Trimble, Kory L Alderson, Amy K Erbe, Kimberly A McDowell, Bartosz Grzywacz, Jacquelyn A Hank, Paul M Sondel.
Abstract
Disease recurrence is frequent in high-risk neuroblastoma (NBL) patients even after multi-modality aggressive treatment [a combination of chemotherapy, surgical resection, local radiation therapy, autologous stem cell transplantation, and cis-retinoic acid (CRA)]. Recent clinical studies have explored the use of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that bind to disialoganglioside (GD(2)), highly expressed in NBL, as a means to enable immune effector cells to destroy NBL cells via antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC). Preclinical data indicate that ADCC can be more effective when appropriate effector cells are activated by cytokines. Clinical studies have pursued this by administering anti-GD(2) mAb in combination with ADCC-enhancing cytokines (IL2 and GM-CSF), a regimen that has demonstrated improved cancer-free survival. More recently, early clinical studies have used a fusion protein that consists of the anti-GD(2) mAb directly linked to IL2, and anti-tumor responses were seen in the Phase II setting. Analyses of genes that code for receptors that influence ADCC activity and natural killer (NK) cell function [Fc receptor (FcR), killer immunoglublin-like receptor (KIR), and KIR-ligand (KIR-L)] suggest patients with anti-tumor activity are more likely to have certain genotype profiles. Further analyses will need to be conducted to determine whether these genotypes can be used as predictive markers for favorable therapeutic outcome. In this review, we discuss factors that affect response to mAb-based tumor therapies such as hu14.18-IL2. Many of our observations have been made in the context of NBL; however, we will also include some observations made with mAbs targeting other tumor types that are consistent with results in NBL. Therefore, we hypothesize that the NBL observations discussed here may also be relevant to mAb therapy for other cancers, in which ADCC is known to play a role.Entities:
Keywords: ADCC; FcR; IL2; KIR; immunocytokine; mAb; neuroblastoma
Year: 2012 PMID: 22623917 PMCID: PMC3353262 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2012.00091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 114.18-IL2 IC increases conjugate formation between M21 (GD. M21 and NKL cells were dyed with BODIPY and CFSE respectively, incubated together with the depicted treatments and analyzed for conjugate formation. huKS-IL2 IC, which recognizes EpCAM not GD2, was added to demonstrate specificity of the hu14.18-IL2 IC. Pre-treatment with blocking anti-CD25 mAb almost completely abrogates conjugate formation. Numbers in dot plots indicate percentage of total counted events in each quadrant, with the upper right quadrant indicating 2-color conjugate events. The results are representative of three independent experiments (Reproduced here, with permission, from Gubbels et al., 2011).
Figure 2Schematic depicting hypothesized impact of KIR/KIR-L and FcR genotype on anti-tumor activity following mAb treatment. KIR molecules are shown as either being matched or mismatched for the appropriate Class I Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) antigen on the tumor cell (HLA Class I in humans). The FcR genotypes shown correspond to those for CD16 on NK cells. For any potential synapse between an NK cell and a tumor cell, multiple interactions between many Fc components on mAb-coated tumor cells and many CD16 molecules on the NK cell (similar to the individual interaction shown) would need to be involved. Similarly, multiple interactions between multiple HLA Class I molecules on the tumor cell and multiple KIR receoptors on the NK cell (similar to the individual interaction shown) would also be involved. Analogous relationships are predicted for the interaction of Fc and the distinct CD32 polymorphisms expressed on neutrophils, monocytes and macrophages. The overall response will reflect the balancing of the signal activating tumor lysis (depicted as a green arrow) with the inhibitory effect of KIR ligation (depicted as a red arrow). The poorest response/least tumor cell lysis (designated +) would result from having low affinity FcRs and being KIR/KIR-L matched (upper left quadrant). The best response/greatest tumor cell lysis (designated +++) would result from having high affinity FcRs and being autologous KIR/KIR-L mismatched (lower right quadrant). Having either low affinity FcRs and being KIR/KIR-L mismatched (upper right quadrant) or having high affinity FcRs and being KIR/KIR-L matched (lower left quadrant) would result in an intermediate response/level of tumor cell lysis (designated ++).