| Literature DB >> 24971166 |
Howard L Kaufman1, Carl E Ruby2, Tasha Hughes2, Craig L Slingluff3.
Abstract
In 2012, it was estimated that 9180 people in the United States would die from melanoma and that more than 76,000 new cases would be diagnosed. Surgical resection is effective for early-stage melanoma, but outcomes are poor for patients with advanced disease. Expression of tumor-associated antigens by melanoma cells makes the disease a promising candidate for immunotherapy. The hematopoietic cytokine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) has a variety of effects on the immune system including activation of T cells and maturation of dendritic cells, as well as an ability to promote humoral and cell-mediated responses. Given its immunobiology, there has been interest in strategies incorporating GM-CSF in the treatment of melanoma. Preclinical studies with GM-CSF have suggested that it has antitumor activity against melanoma and can enhance the activity of anti-melanoma vaccines. Numerous clinical studies have evaluated recombinant GM-CSF as a monotherapy, as adjuvant with or without cancer vaccines, or in combination with chemotherapy. Although there have been suggestions of clinical benefit in some studies, results have been inconsistent. More recently, novel approaches incorporating GM-CSF in the treatment of melanoma have been evaluated. These have included oncolytic immunotherapy with the GM-CSF-expressing engineered herpes simplex virus talimogene laherparepvec and administration of GM-CSF in combination with ipilimumab, both of which have improved patient outcomes in phase 3 studies. This review describes the diverse body of preclinical and clinical evidence regarding use of GM-CSF in the treatment of melanoma.Entities:
Keywords: Cellular immunotherapy; GM-CSF; Granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor; Melanoma
Year: 2014 PMID: 24971166 PMCID: PMC4072479 DOI: 10.1186/2051-1426-2-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Figure 1Immunobiologic effects of GM-CSF. (A) Effects of GM-CSF on cells of the immune system. (B) Effects of GM-CSF on dendritic cells and T cells in the tumor microenvironment.
Clinical studies evaluating adjuvant GM-CSF in patients with surgically resected melanoma
| Spitler et al. [ | 48 | 125 μg/m2 for 14 d, 28-d cycles, for 1 y | Historical | OS: 37.5 mo |
| Markovic et al. [ | 70 (Stage IV) 149 (Stage III) | 125 μg/m2 for 14 d, 28-d cycles, for 1 y 125 μg/m2 for 14 d, 28-d cycles, for 1 y | Observation | OS: 6.6 y (GM-CSF) vs 6.8 y (control) OS: 8.6 (GM-CSF) vs 5.2 y (control) |
| Isla et al. [ | 24 | 150 mg/d for 2 y | None | DFS at 1 y: 88.8% |
| Elias et al. [ | 45 | 125 μg/m2 for 14 d, then IL-2 9 × 106 IU/m2 for 4 d,/28-d cycle, ± autologous vaccine | None | DFS at 15.9 mo: 60% OS at 21 mo: 64% (21 mo follow-up) |
| Spitler et al. [ | 98 | 125 μg/m2 for 14 d, 28-d cycles, for 3 y | None | DFS: 1.4 y 5-y survival: 60% |
| Lawson et al. [ | 743 | 250 μg/m2 for 14 d, 28-d cycles, for 1 y | Placebo | OS: 62.4 mo for placebo vs. 69.6 mo for GM-CSF (HR, 0.96) DFS: 9.2 mo for placebo vs. 11.5 mo for GM-CSF (HR, 0.88) |
DFS = disease-free survival; GM-CSF = granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; HR = hazard ratio; IL-2 = interleukin-2; OS = overall survival.
Studies evaluating GM-CSF as a monotherapy in patients with advanced melanoma
| Si et al. [ | 13 | 15–50 μg/lesion at 2 sites per patient | Intralesional | 1 PR, 8 SD | Responding patients had increased T-cell and Langerhans cell infiltration of the tumor |
| Site 1: 5 times daily | |||||
| Site 2: 5 times daily then once weekly for 6 mo | |||||
| Nasi et al. [ | 16 | 10, 20, 40, or 80 μg/injection for 10 d | Intralesional | 3 SD | Significant increase in DCs and T cells at injection sites |
| Vaquerano et al. [ | 1 | 500 μg/d for 4 d, monthly | Intralesional | 1 PR | Regression of melanoma cells |
| Hoeller et al. [ | 7 | 400 μg/d for 5 d, 21-d cycle | Perilesional | 6 with reduced lesion size | Increased infiltration of monocytes and lymphocytes was observed in injected and systemic sites |
| Ridolfi et al. [ | 14 | 150 μg/lesion plus IL-2 3 × 106 IU for 5 d, 21-day cycle | Intralesional (GM-CSF) Perilesional (IL-2) | 2 PR, 2 MR, 7 SD | Some evidence of systemic immune activation |
| Rao et al. [ | 14 | 250 μg twice daily for 7 d on alternating weeks | Aerosol delivery for lung metastases | 6 SD | Upregulation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes was observed in peripheral blood |
| Markovic et al. [ | 35 | 500–2000 μg (250-μg/dose increments) twice daily on days 1–7 and 15–21, over 28 d | Aerosol delivery for lung metastases | 1 PR, 5 SD | A trend toward increased immune response was observed with higher doses; MTD was not reached |
| Sato et al. [ | 31 | 25–2000 μg every 4 wk | Hepatic artery immunoembolization | 2 CR, 8 PR, 10 SD | Prolonged PFS correlated with higher GM-CSF doses |
| Eschelman et al. [ | 52 | 2000 μg every 4 wk | Hepatic artery immunoembolization | 5 PR, 12 SD | Trend toward increased OS with GM-CSF; prolonged OS with GM-CSF in patients with bulky metastases |
CR = complete response; DC = dendritic cell; GM-CSF = granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; IL-2 = interleukin-2; MTD = maximum tolerated dose; MR = mixed response; OS = overall survival; PD = progressive disease; PFS = progression free survival; PR = partial response; SD = stable disease.
Studies evaluating GM-CSF in combination with chemotherapy in patients with advanced melanoma
| Schacter et al. [ | 40 | 20 μg/m2 once daily for 7 d every 3 wk | BCNU, CDDP, DTIC, tamoxifen, IFN-α | 9 CR, 11 PR, 2 SD OS:14 mo |
| Gajewski et al. [ | 7 | 5 μg/kg for 6 d | DTIC, CDDP, IL-2, IFN-α | 1 CR, 1 PR, 2 MR |
| Gibbs et al. [ | 60 | 250 μg/m2 for 20 d, 28-d cycle | TMZ, CDDP, IL-2, IFN-α | 1 CR, 11 PR Median OS: 11 mo |
| Vaughan et al. [ | 19 | DTIC, CDDP, IL-2, IFN-α, TAM | 2 CR, 4 PR OS: 6.2 mo Trend toward increasing response with higher GM-CSF doses | |
| Gong et al. [ | 30 | 5 μg/kg (first 25 patients) or 450 μg/m2 (last 8 patients) for 6 d | DTIC, CDDP, IL-2, IFN-α | 3 CR, 4 PR, 6 MR, 7 SD Median OS: 15 mo |
| Groenewegen et al. [ | 31 | 2.5 μg/kg for 10 d | DTIC, IL-2, IFN-α | 4 CR, 6 PR Median OS: 8 mo 1-y survival: 22% |
| De Gast et al. [ | 74 | 2.5 μg/kg for 12 d | TMZ, IL-2, IFN-α | 4 CR, 19 PR, 13 SD OS: 8.3 mo 1-y survival: 41% |
| Smith et al. [ | 8 | 125 and 250 μg/m2/d for 7 d every 2 wk, 28-d cycle | IL-2 | 0 CR, 0 PR |
| Fruehauf et al. [ | 10 | 250 μg/m2 for 11 d | DOX, VIN | 0 CR, 5 PR Median time to progression: 8 mo |
| Lewis et al. [ | 71 | 250 μg/m2 for 20 d, 28-d cycle | TMZ, CDDP, IFN-α, IL-2 | 0 CR, 10 PR Median OS: 8.6 mo |
| Weber et al. [ | 31 | 125 μg/m2 for 12 d, 28-d cycle | TMZ, IL-2, IFN-α | 4 CR, 4 PR, 7 SD OS: 13.1 mo |
| Jin et al. [ | 18 | 175 μg/m2 for 4 d, 21-d cycle | DTIC, IL-2 | 4 CR, 8 PR |
| O’Day [ | 131 | 10 CR, 47 PR, 38 SD Median OS: 13.5 mo 1-y survival: 57% | ||
| Gunturu et al. [ | 18 | 250 μg/m2 from day 8 until AGC >5000 cells/μL on 2 consecutive days | CTX, FLU, MESNA, IL-2 | 1 CR, 3 PR |
| Locke et al. [ | 14 | 250 μg/m2 until WBC >30000/μL or for 10 d, 21-d cycle | OX, DOX | 0 CR, 0 PR, 5 SD |
| Lutzky et al. [ | 30 | 125 μg/m2 for 35 d | IL-2 | 0 CR, 4 PR, 8 SD Median OS: 10.7 mo 1-y survival: 32.5% |
AGC = absolute granulocyte count; ANC = absolute neutrophil count; BCNU = carmustine; CDDP = cisplatin; CR = complete response; CTX = cyclophosphamide; DOX = docetaxel; DTIC = dacarbazine; FLU = fludarabine; GM-CSF = granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; IFN-α = interferon-α; IL-2 = interleukin-2; MESNA = sodium 2-mercaptoethanesulfonate; MR = mixed response; OS = overall survival; OX = oxaliplatin; PFS = progression-free survival; PR = partial response; SD = stable disease; TAM = tamoxifen; TMZ = temozolomide; VBL = vinblastine; VIN = vinorelbine.
Cancer vaccines testing the adjuvant effect of GM-CSF administered locally at the site of vaccination
| Scheibenbogen et al. [ | Sequential cohorts (n = 43) | Tyrosinase peptides (ID/SC) | Protein (ID/SC) 75 μg/d x 4 d/vaccine | Yes | Sequential: | Minimal adjuvant effect Sequential trial cohorts | Minimal adjuvant effect |
| 1. Peptides alone | |||||||
| 2. Peptides + GM-CSF | |||||||
| 3. Peptides + KLH | |||||||
| 4. Peptides + GM-CSF + KLH | |||||||
| Slingluff et al. [ | Randomized (n = 121) | Melanoma peptides (ID/SC) | Protein 110 μg (ID/SC) | Yes | Randomized: | Negative on CD4 and CD8 T cells; too few events to differences in survival between groups | Diminished, compared with IFA |
| 1. Peptides + IFA | |||||||
| 2. Peptides + IFA + GM-CSF | |||||||
| Faries et al. [ | Randomized (n = 97) | Whole melanoma cell vaccine (ID) | Protein 200 μg/m2/d x 5 days (ID) | Yes | Randomized: | Better Ab, worse DTH; more Eos, Dec monocytes; more deaths | Diminished compared with BCG |
| 1. Whole cell vaccine + BCG + GM-CSF | |||||||
| 2. Whole cell vaccine + BCG | |||||||
| Kirkwood et al. [ | 2 × 2 (n = 120) | MART-1, gp100, and tyrosinase peptides (SC) | 250 μg/d x 14 out of 28 days | Yes | 2 × 2: | No effect across treatment arms on best overall response | Minimal adjuvant effect |
| | | | | | Arm A: Peptide Vaccine Alone | | |
| | | | | | Arm B: GM-CSF (250 μg/d x 14 out of 28 d) + vaccine | | |
| | | | | | Arm C: IFN-α + vaccine | | |
| Arm D: GM-CSF + IFN-α + vaccine |
ID = intradermal; SC = subcutaneous; IFA = incomplete Freund’s adjuvant; BCG = Bacille Calmette-Guerin.