| Literature DB >> 23144564 |
Oscar Peralta-Zaragoza1, Víctor Hugo Bermúdez-Morales, Carlos Pérez-Plasencia, Jonathan Salazar-León, Claudia Gómez-Cerón, Vicente Madrid-Marina.
Abstract
Cervical cancer is the second most common cause of cancer death in women worldwide and the development of new diagnosis, prognostic, and treatment strategies merits special attention. Although surgery and chemoradiotherapy can cure 80%-95% of women with early stage cancer, the recurrent and metastatic disease remains a major cause of cancer death. Many efforts have been made to design new drugs and develop gene therapies to treat cervical cancer. In recent decades, research on treatment strategies has proposed several options, including the role of HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes, which are retained and expressed in most cervical cancers and whose respective oncoproteins are critical to the induction and maintenance of the malignant phenotype. Other efforts have been focused on antitumor immunotherapy strategies. It is known that during the development of cervical cancer, a cascade of abnormal events is induced, including disruption of cellular cycle control, perturbation of antitumor immune response, alteration of gene expression, and deregulation of microRNA expression. Thus, in this review article we discuss potential targets for the treatment of cervical cancer associated with HPV infection, with special attention to immunotherapy approaches, clinical trials, siRNA molecules, and their implications as gene therapy strategies against cervical cancer development.Entities:
Keywords: HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes; cervical cancer; clinical trials; gene therapy; siRNAs
Year: 2012 PMID: 23144564 PMCID: PMC3493318 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S25123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Advantages and disadvantages of HPV therapeutic vaccines
| Vaccine approach | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Viral vector-based |
High immunogenicity Wide variety of vectors available Can facilitate intracellular antigen spreading Different immunological properties of viruses |
Risk of toxicity in using live viruses Potential pre-existing immunity may inhibit repeated administration Possible dominance of immune response to viral vector rather than HPV antigen |
| Bacterial vector-based |
High immunogenicity Can deliver either engineered plasmids or HPV tumor proteins to APCs Wide variety of vectors available |
Risk of toxicity in using live bacteria Potential pre-existing immunity Inhibited repeat immunization |
| Peptide-based |
Easy to produce, stable, safe Can combine multiple epitopes Can engineer peptides for enhanced MHC binding |
Low immunogenicity Epitopes must be determined HLA-restriction Difficult to have one-fits-all peptide |
| Protein-based |
Stable, safe, easy to produce No HLA restriction Multiple known adjuvants |
Low immunogenicity; requires adjuvant Usually better induction of antibody response than CTL response |
| DNA-based |
Safe, easy to produce, stable for storage and transportation Capacity for repeated administration Easy to prepare at high purity Several delivery methods possible Sustained expression of antigen on MHC-peptide complex Can be engineered to add targeting and/or co-stimulatory genes |
No intercellular spreading immunogenicity Risk of integration into genome or cellular transformation |
| RNA-based |
Non-infectious, no risk of genomic integration or cellular transformation Transient Can administer multiple times Enhanced antigen expression Multiple vectors are available |
Unstable, difficulty in long-term storage Labor intensive preparation Difficult to prepare large amounts No intercellular spreading |
| Dendritic cell-based |
High immunogenicity; uses the most potent APCs Multiple methods available to load antigen Efficient antigen presentation Potency can be enhanced by gene transduction or cytokine treatment |
Labor intensive, expensive, ex vivo, individualized cell processing Variable quality control and a lack of agreed standards for quality of vaccines Difficult to produce on a large scale DCs do not necessarily home to lymph nodes |
| Tumor cell-based |
Useful if tumor antigen unknown Likely to express tumor antigens Potency can be enhanced by cytokine treatment |
Safety concerns about injecting tumor cells into patients Labor intensive as it is individualized Costly, difficult to produce on a large scale Requires availability of tumor cell lines or autologous tumor cells |
Gene therapy clinical trials worldwide on cervical cancer from 1989 to 2012
| ID trial | Title/Country | Indication/clinical phase | Status/year approved-initiated | Gene(s) transferred | Vector used/administration route | Gene delivery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BE-0024 | A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group, multi-center study of the safety and response rate of 3 subcutaneously administered doses of 5 × 107 pfu RO5217790 in patients with high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or 3 associated with high-risk HPV infection. Belgium | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. | Open |
delE6 delE7 IL-2 | Vaccinia virus/ND | ND |
| CH-0035 | Immunotherapy for stage I cervical carcinoma. Switzerland | Stage I cervical carcinoma. | Closed |
IL-2 | Vaccinia virus/intramuscular | ND |
| CH-0036 | Immunotherapy for advanced cervical carcinoma. Switzerland | Advanced cervical carcinoma. | Closed |
IL-2 | Vaccinia virus/intramuscular | ND |
| CN-0010 | Gendicine intratumoral injection combined with radiotherapy for advanced cervical carcinoma. China | Cervical carcinoma. | Open |
p53 | Adenovirus/intramuscular | ND |
| ES-0010 | A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group, multi-center study on the safety and response rate of 3 subcutaneously administered doses of 5 × 107 pfu RO5217790 in patients with high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or 3 associated with high-risk HPV infection. Spain | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. | Open |
delE6 delE7 IL-2 | Vaccinia virus/ND | ND |
| FR-0032 | Phase II trial to assess efficacy of TG4001 (MVA-HPV-IL2) in patients with grade 2/3 cervical intra-epithelial neoplasia (CIN 2/3) linked to HPV16 infection (protocol TH4001.07). France | CIN 2 and 3. | Open |
IL-2 HPV16 | Vaccinia virus/ND | ND |
| MX-0001 | Clinical protocol. A Phase II study: Efficacy of the gene therapy of the MVA E2 recombinant virus in the treatment of precancerous lesions (NIC I and NIC II) associated with infection of oncogenic human papillomavirus. Mexico | Cervical cancer. | Open |
ND | Adenovirus/ND | ND |
| UK-0041 | Use of a recombinant Vaccinia vaccine (TA-HPV) to treat cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III. UK | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III. | Open |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes | Poxvirus/ND | ND |
| UK-0042 | Use of a recombinant Vaccinia vaccine (TA-HPV) to treat cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III. UK | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III. | Open |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes | Poxvirus/ND | ND |
| UK-0046 | Use of a recombinant Vaccinia vaccine (TA-HPV) to treat cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III. UK | Cervical intraeptihelial carcinoma III. | Closed |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes | Vaccinia virus/ND | In vivo |
| UK-0047 | Use of a recombinant Vaccinia vaccine (TA-HPV) to treat cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III. UK | Cervical intraeptihelial carcinoma III. | Closed |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes | Vaccinia virus/ND | In vivo |
| UK-0071 | A Phase II, multi-center, double- blind, placebo-controlled, dose finding study of ZYC101a in the treatment of high-grade squamous intra-epithelial lesions of the uterine cervix. UK | Ano-genital neoplasia III. | Open |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes | Naked plasmid DNA/ND | ND |
| UK-0074 | TA-HPV recombinant vaccinia virus expressing the human papillomavirus 16 and 18 E6 and E7 proteins: application to amend currently approved protocol to add a clinical trial involving prime-boost strategy of TA-CIN administered in association with TA-HPV in high-grade ano-genital intraepithelial neoplasia (AGIN) patients (PB-HPV/01). UK | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes | Vaccinia virus/ND | ND |
| US-0307 | Phase I trial of immunotherapy with MVA-HPV-IL2 (TG4001) in women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) Grade 3. USA | Cervical cancer. | Closed |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes IL-2 | Poxvirus/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-0309 | Phase I trial of immunotherapy with MVA-HPV-IL2 (TG4001) in women with advanced cervical carcinoma. USA | Cervical cancer. | Closed |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes IL-2 | Poxvirus/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-0592 | A phase I study to determine the safety and immunogenicity of vaccination with | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV E7 oncogene | In vivo | |
| US-0595 | A Phase I/II clinical trial of pNGVL4a-Sig/E7 (detox)/HSP70 for the treatment of patients with HPV16+ cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 2/3 (CIN2/3). USA | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV16 E7 oncogene | Naked plasmid DNA/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-0916 | Phase I, open-label, dose escalation study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of HPV DNA plasmid (VGX-3100) + electroporation (EP) in adult females with histological diagnosis of grade 2 or 3 cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN). USA | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV16 E6 and E7 oncogenes HPV18 E6 and E7 oncogenes | Naked plasmid DNA/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-0928 | A Phase I efficacy and safety study of HPV16-specific therapeutic DNA-rVaccinia vaccination in combination with topical imiquimod in patients with HPV16+ high-grade cervical dysplasia (CIN3). USA | HPV16+ high grade cervical dysplasia. | Open |
HPV16 + HPV18 E6 + E7 oncogenes | Naked plasmid DNA + vaccinia virus/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-0958 | A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group, multi-center study of the safety and response rate of 3 subcutaneously administered doses of 5 × 107 pfu R05217790 in patients with high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or 3 associated with high-risk HPV infection. USA | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN). | Open |
HPV E6 and E7 oncogenes IL-2 | Vaccinia virus/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-0984 | A pilot study of pNGVL4a-CRT/E7(detox) for the treatment of patients with HPV16+ cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 2/3 (CIN2/3). USA | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV16 E7 oncogene | Naked plasmid DNA/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-1040 | Phase I, open-label study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of a 4th dose of HPV DNA plasmid (VGX-3100) + electroporation (EP) in adult females previously immunized with VGX-3100. USA | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV16 E6 and E7 oncogenes HPV18 E6 and E7 oncogenes | Naked plasmid DNA/intramuscular | In vivo |
| US-1082 | A Phase II evaluation of ADXS11-001 (NSC #752718, IND # 13,712) in the treatment of persistent or recurrent squamous or on-squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. USA | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV E7 oncogene | In vivo | |
| US-1093 | Phase II placebo-controlled study of VGX-3100, (HPV16 E6/E7, HPV18 E6/E7 DNA vaccine) delivered IM followed by electroporation (Ep) with cellectra-5p for the treatment of biopsy-proven CIN 2/3 or CIN 3 with documented HPV 16 or 18. USA | Cervical cancer. | Open |
HPV16 E6-E7 fusion protein HPV18 E6-E7 fusion protein | Naked plasmid DNA/intramuscular | In vivo |
| XX-0006 | Gene therapy in patients with stage I cervical carcinoma. Multi-country | Stage I cervical carcinoma. | Closed |
HPV IL-2 | Vaccinia virus/intramuscular | ND |
| XX-0007 | Gene therapy in patients with advanced cervical carcinoma. Multi-country | Advanced cervical carcinoma. | Closed |
HPV IL-2 | Vaccinia virus/intramuscular | ND |
Note: Copyright © 2012, John Wiley and Sons. Adapted with permission from ABEDIA [webpage on the Internet]. Database of clinical trials [updated Jun 2012]. Available from: http://www.abedia.com/wiley/index.html. Accessed August 1, 2012.67
Abbreviations: HPV, human papillovirus; ND, no data provided.