| Literature DB >> 24445502 |
Tim Eisen1, Gunnar Hedlund, Göran Forsberg, Robert Hawkins.
Abstract
Improvement of cancer therapy by introducing new concepts is still urgent even though there have been major advancements lately. Immunotherapy is well on the way to becoming an established tool in the cancer treatment armory. It seems that a combination of (1) activation of immune effector cells and selective targeting of them to tumors and (2) the inhibition of immune suppression often induced by the tumor itself are necessary to achieve the therapeutic goal. The immunotoxin naptumomab estafenatox was developed in an effort to activate and target the patient's own T cells to their tumor, by fusing a superantigen (SAg) variant that activates T lymphocytes to the Fab moiety of a tumor-reactive monoclonal antibody. Naptumomab estafenatox targets the 5T4 tumor antigen, a 72-kDa oncofetal trophoblast protein expressed on many carcinomas, including renal cell carcinoma. The therapeutic effect is associated with activation of SAg-binding T cells. The SAg-binding T lymphocytes expand, differentiate to effector cells, and infiltrate the tumor. The therapeutic efficacy is most likely related to the dual mechanism of tumor cell killing: (1) direct lysis by cytotoxic T lymphocytes of tumor cells expressing the antigen recognized by the antibody moiety of the fusion protein and (2) secretion of cytokines eliminating antigen-negative tumor cell variants. Naptumomab estafenatox has been clinically tested in a range of solid tumors with focus on renal cell carcinoma. This review looks at the clinical experience with the new immunotoxin and its potential.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24445502 PMCID: PMC3918406 DOI: 10.1007/s11912-013-0370-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol Rep ISSN: 1523-3790 Impact factor: 5.075
Fig. 1a Mechanism of action of naptumomab estafenatox (Nap). b Immune/drug functions during a naptumomab estafenatox (Nap) treatment cycle. c Different fusion proteins. The tumor-targeted superantigens are naptumomab estafenatox, anatumomab mafenatox, nacolomab tafenatox, and C215–staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA). CTL cytotoxic T lymphocyte, IFN interferon, TAA tumor-associated antigen, TCR T-cell receptor, TNF tumor necrosis factor
5T4 reactivity in a variety of tumor types Cancer
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | Mixed | 56/63 | 85–95 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen. |
| Cervix | Mixed | 5/5 | 85–90 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen. |
| I | 22/25 | ||
| II | 22/26 | ||
| III | 9/10 | ||
| IV | 5/6 | ||
| Colorectal | Mixed | 11/22 | 40–50 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen. In Dukes stage D patients, more than 70 % over-express the antigen. |
| A | 2/8 | ||
| B | 7/34 | ||
| C | 13/21 | ||
| D | 7/9 | ||
| Gastric | Mixed | 41/93 | Approximately 50 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen on tumor cells. Most samples with 5T4 negative tumor cells have 5T4 positive tumor stroma [ |
| I | 1/2 | ||
| II | 1/4 | ||
| III | 1/1 | ||
| IV | 12/20 | ||
| NSCLC | Mixed | 259/261 | 99 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen. |
| Ovarian | Mixed | 4/7 | More than 70 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen.. For stage IV patients, 90–95 % of the patients are 5T4 positive. |
| I | 2/10 | ||
| II | 4/57 | ||
| III | 21/29 | ||
| IV | 24/26 | ||
| Pancreatic | Mixed | 23/23 | 100 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen. |
| Prostate | Mixed | 26/26 | 100 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen. |
| Renal | Clear cell | 215/222 | >95 % of patients express the 5T4 antigen. |
| Papillary | 18/18 | ||
| Mixed | 36/37 |