| Literature DB >> 25859247 |
Florencia Paula Madorsky Rowdo1, Antonela Baron1, Mariela Urrutia1, José Mordoh2.
Abstract
Cancer immunotherapy has emerged as a treatment modality, mainly as the result of discoveries in the immune response regulation, including mechanisms that turn off immune responses. Immunogenic cutaneous melanoma is a canonical model for therapeutic immunotherapy studies. "Passive" immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) has outpaced "active" immunotherapy with anti-tumor vaccines, and mAbs that antagonize the off responses have been recently introduced in clinical practice. Despite these recent successes, many unresolved practical and theoretical questions remain. Notably unknown are the identity of the lymphocytes that eliminate tumor cells, which white cells enter into tumors, through which endothelium, in what order, and how they perform their task. The parameters of size and location that could be used to determine in which tumors the immune response may be sufficient to eradicate the tumor are yet unknown. Immunotherapy has been so far more efficient to treat solid and hematologic tumors located outside the central nervous system, than primary brain tumors and brain metastases. In contrast to recent advances with mAbs, anti-tumor vaccine development has been lagging behind. The multiplicity of antigens that must be targeted to achieve significant clinical response is partially responsible for this lag, especially in melanoma, one of the most mutated tumors. Further hampering vaccination results is the fact that tumor elimination by the immune system is the result of a race between tumors with different growth rates and the relatively slow development of the adaptive immune response. The enhancement of the native arm of the immune response or the administration of targeted chemotherapy to slow tumor development, are approaches that should be studied. Finally, criteria used to analyze patient response to immunotherapeutic treatments must be perfected, and the patient populations that could benefit the most from this approach must be better defined.Entities:
Keywords: CTLA-4; PD-1; cancer immunotherapy; melanoma; monoclonal antibodies; vaccines
Year: 2015 PMID: 25859247 PMCID: PMC4374472 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Selected clinical trials with anti-checkpoint mAbs.
| Patients | Phase | Treatment | Study groups | Results | Toxicity | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melanoma HLA-A*0201-positive unresectable stage III or IV previously treated | III | Ipilimumab | 676 | Ipilimumab plus gp100 | OS 10.0 months groups I versus 10.1 months group II versus 6.4 months group III | 10–15% irAE grades 3–4 | ( |
| gp100 vaccine | Ipilimumab | ||||||
| gp100 | |||||||
| Melanoma unresectable stage III or IV previously untreated | III | Ipilimumab DTIC | 502 | Ipilimumab (10 mg/kg i.v.) plus DTIC (850 mg/m2) DTIC (850 mg/m2) plus placebo | OS 11.2 months group I versus 9.1 months group II | 56.3% grades 3–4 group I, 27.5% grades 3–4 group II | ( |
| Melanoma unresectable stage III or IV | Ib | Lambrolizumab | 135 | 10 mg/kg every 2–3 week | OR 38% | 13% grades 3–4 irAEs | ( |
| 2 mg/kg every 3 week | |||||||
| Melanoma unresectable stage III or IV BRAF wild-type previously untreated | III | Nivolumab DTIC | 418 | Nivolumab 3 mg/kg every 2 week DTIC 1000 mg/m2 every 3 week | OS (1 year) 72.9% group I versus 42.1% group II | 11.7% grades 3–4 group I, 17.6% grades 3–4 group II | ( |
| Refractory or relapsed Hodgkin’s lymphoma pre-treated | I | Nivolumab | 23 | 1–3 mg/kg dose escalation cohort, expansion cohort 3 mg/kg 1, 4 weeks and then every 2 week | OR 87%, PR 70%, CR 17% | 22% grade 3 | ( |
| Advanced melanoma, NSCLC, prostate cancer, renal-cell cancer, CRC | I | Nivolumab | 296 | 1, 3, and 10 mg/kg | OR 18–28% | 14% grades 3–4 | ( |
| Melanoma unresectable stage III or IV previously treated with Ipilimumab | I | Nivolumab Ipilimumab | 53 | Concurrent regimen | OR 40% | 53% grades 3 or 4 | ( |
irAEs, immune-related adverse events; OS, overall survival; OR, overall response; CR, complete response; PR, partial response.
Figure 1Anti-checkpoint therapies targeting CTLA-4 or PD-1. Peripheral CD8 infiltration (left) become tumor invasive (right) after anti-checkpoint treatment. (A) CD8+ T cells are inhibited by CTLA-4 signaling and by Treg cells. mAbs anti-CTLA-4 interrupt negative signaling resulting in CD8+ cells proliferation. (B) PD-1 expressed in CD8+ cells interacts with PD-L1 expressed in tumor cells and leads to CD8+ inhibition. mAbs anti-PD-1 disrupt negative regulation resulting in activation of CD8+ cells.