| Literature DB >> 24999342 |
Jianfang Ning1, Hiroaki Wakimoto1.
Abstract
Oncolytic viruses (OV) are a class of antitumor agents that selectively kill tumor cells while sparing normal cells. Oncolytic herpes simplex virus (oHSV) has been investigated in clinical trials for patients with the malignant brain tumor glioblastoma for more than a decade. These clinical studies have shown the safety of oHSV administration to the human brain, however, therapeutic efficacy of oHSV as a single treatment remains unsatisfactory. Factors that could hamper the anti-glioblastoma efficacy of oHSV include: attenuated potency of oHSV due to deletion or mutation of viral genes involved in virulence, restricting viral replication and spread within the tumor; suboptimal oHSV delivery associated with intratumoral injection; virus infection-induced inflammatory and cellular immune responses which could inhibit oHSV replication and promote its clearance; lack of effective incorporation of oHSV into standard-of-care, and poor knowledge about the ability of oHSV to target glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs). In an attempt to address these issues, recent research efforts have been directed at: (1) design of new engineered viruses to enhance potency, (2) better understanding of the role of the cellular immunity elicited by oHSV infection of tumors, (3) combinatorial strategies with different antitumor agents with a mechanistic rationale, (4) "armed" viruses expressing therapeutic transgenes, (5) use of GSC-derived models in oHSV evaluation, and (6) combinations of these. In this review, we will describe the current status of oHSV clinical trials for glioblastoma, and discuss recent research advances and future directions toward successful oHSV-based therapy of glioblastoma.Entities:
Keywords: combination therapy; gene therapy; glioblastoma; glioblastoma stem cells; herpes simplex virus type 1; molecular targeted therapy; oncolytic virus; synergy
Year: 2014 PMID: 24999342 PMCID: PMC4064532 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Oncolytic herpes simplex viruses in completed and ongoing clinical trials for malignant glioma.
| 1716 | UK | 1996 | Closed | I | Intatumoral, 103–105 pfu, single injection | Of 9 patients treated, 4 were alive and well 14–24 months after 1716 administration. No toxicity or serious adverse events. | Trial ID: UK0033 |
| 1716 | UK | 2000 | Closed | I | Intatumoral, 105 pfu, single injection | No toxicity or serious adverse events | (Papanastassiou et al., |
| 1716 | UK | 2001 | Closed | I | Adjacent brain, 105 pfu, single injection | 3 out of 12 patients remained alive and clinically stable at 15–22 months post-surgery and 1716. No toxicity or serious adverse events. | (Harrow et al., |
| 1716 | UK | 2006 | Open | II/III | Intratumoral | Unpublished | UK0136 |
| 1716 | USA | 2013 | Open | I | Intratumoral/Peritumoral | Unpublished | Trial ID: NCT02031965 |
| G207 | USA | 1998 | Open | I | Intratumoral, 106 – 3 × 109 pfu, single injection | 8 out of 21 patients with decreased tumor volume. No toxicity or serious adverse events. | Trial ID: US0235 |
| G207 | USA | 2002 | Closed | Ib | Intratumoral and adjacent brain, total 1.15 × 109 pfu, two injections before and after resection. | Adverse events in 1 of 6 patients. | Trial ID: NCT00028158 (Markert et al., |
| G207 | USA | 2005 | Closed | I | Intratumoral injections at 109 pfu, followed by a single focal irradiation (5 Gy) 24 h later. | Marked radiographic response in 3 of 9 patients, with 7.5 months of median survival. No toxicity or serious adverse events. | Trial ID: NCT00157703 (Markert et al., |
| G47Δ | Japan | 2009 | Open | I/II | Stereotactic intratumoral injections, 2nd injection follows 5–14 days later. | Unpublished | Trial No.: UMIN000002661 |
| rQNestin –34.5 | USA | 2011 | Open | I | Peritumoral | Unpublished | Trial ID: US1100 |
| M032 | USA | 2014 | Open | I | Intratumoral, single injection | Unpublished | Trial ID: NCT02062827 |
Year approved or initiated.
According to The Journal of Gene Medicine Clinical Trial site (http://www.abedia.com/wiley/index.html).
Figure 1Two-phasic process that oHSV-based strategies go through toward successful GBM tumor elimination. For each phase, representative interventional approaches that we discussed in the text are listed on the right.