| Literature DB >> 26871948 |
Joshua M Gammon1, Neil M Dold1, Christopher M Jewell1,2,3.
Abstract
Immunotherapies for cancer have progressed enormously over the past few decades, and hold great promise for the future. The successes of these therapies, with some patients showing durable and complete remission, demonstrate the power of harnessing the immune system to eradicate tumors. However, the effectiveness of current immunotherapies is limited by hurdles ranging from immunosuppressive strategies employed by tumors, to inadequate specificity of existing therapies, to heterogeneity of disease. Further, the vast majority of approved immunotherapies employ systemic delivery of immunomodulators or cells that make addressing some of these challenges more difficult. Natural and synthetic biomaterials - such as biocompatible polymers, self-assembled lipid particles, and implantable biodegradable devices - offer unique potential to address these hurdles by harnessing the benefits of therapeutic targeting, tissue engineering, co-delivery, controlled release, and sensing. However, despite the enormous investment in new materials and nanotechnology, translation of these ideas to the clinic is still an uncommon outcome. Here we review the major challenges facing immunotherapies and discuss how the newest biomaterials and nanotechnologies could help overcome these challenges to create new clinical options for patients.Entities:
Keywords: Immune response; Immunity; Immunology and Microbiology Section; biomaterials; cancer immunotherapy; cancer vaccine; nanotechnology; translational medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26871948 PMCID: PMC4941251 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.7304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Recent studies using biomaterials to address clinical challenges
| Clinical challenge/opportunity | Biomaterial strategies | Key references |
|---|---|---|
| Toxicity | Localizing and extending release of immunostimulants in materials at safer doses | Kwong 2013[ |
| Polarizing adoptively transferred T cells | Perica 2015[ | |
| Nanoparticle conjugation to T cells | Stephan 2010[ | |
| Implanting T cell seeded scaffolds | Stephan 2015[ | |
| Polarizing T cells: cell free therapies | Pathogen mimicking microparticles | Pradhan 2014[ |
| Targeting specific pathways | Delivering siRNA with polymer carriers | Alshamsan 2010[ |
| Using physiological phenomena to localize therapy in lymph nodes | Liu 2014[ | |
| Revisiting cancer vaccination | Active targeting of nanoparticle vaccines to DCs | Rosalia 2015[ |
| Localized delivery of immune signals with Injectable scaffolds | Ali 2009[ | |
| Combining Nanoparticle vaccines with siRNA knockdown of immunosuppressive cytokines | Xu 2014[ | |
| Combination immunotherapies | Controlled combinatorial delivery of adjuvants | Goldinger 2012[ |
| Increasing homing and activity of immune cells in tumor microenvironment | Nanoparticle conjugation to T cells | Huang 2015[ |
| Sequestering of immunostimulants in tumors | Liu 2011[ | |
| Nanogel co-delivery of IL-2 and TGF-β inhibitor | Park 2012[ | |
| Addressing tumor heterogeneity | Microparticle or nanoparticle tumor lysate vaccines | Prassad 2010[ |
| Capture of circulating tumor cells for identification of neoantigens or tumor cell phenotype | Halo 2014[ |
Figure 1CpG variants formulated in NPs prevent tumor growth better than free CpG without increasing systemic inflammation
Low doses of NP-CpG-B do not significantly increase peak levels of inflammation as measured by serum levels of A. TNF-α and B. IL-6. C. NP-CpG-B and NP-CpG-C protects mice from B16-F10-OVA tumor establishment better than unconjugated counterparts. Adapted with permission from [32].
Figure 2Implantable scaffolds enhance ACT
A. BMPs encapsulating T cell stimulants are embedded in the implantable scaffold. B. Scaffold delivered T cells prevent relapse after tumor resection and greatly enhance survival. C. Locally administered T cells within scaffolds persist and proliferate at the tumor site compared to prestimulated T cells administered at the resection site in the absence of a scaffold. Adapted with permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nature Biotechnology [51] copyright (2015).
Figure 3STING agonists exhibit enhanced adjuvant properties and anti-tumor efficacy when administered in NPs rather than soluble form
A. Only NP-formulated cdGMP accumulates in lymph nodes. B. Following s.c. inoculation of EG.7-OVA tumors, NP-cdGMP elicits higher antigen-specific T cell frequencies (SIINFEKL) among CD8+ cells compared with soluble cdGMP. C. Tumor growth is attenuated by NP-cdGMP, but not soluble cdGMP, when administered therapeutically (arrows) after tumor inoculation. D. Mice receiving NP-cdGMP exhibit improved survival. Adapted from Figures 1 and 2 of [34] with permission.
Figure 4A VLP-peptide vaccine containing CpG delivered s.c. or i.d. with adjuvants, or intra-nodally without adjuvants modulates antigen-specific T cell immunity
VLPs with adjuvants promote A. higher overall frequencies of effector memory T cells (CCR7−/CD45RA−), and B. higher frequencies of central memory T cells (CCR7+/CD45RA−) among antigen-specific T cells. C. PET/CT imaging of a draining lymph node in a patient receiving subcutaneous treatment (IFA only). Shown is enlargement (arrows), inflammation visible both arms and one thigh (vaccination sites), and sustained increases in glucose metabolism after vaccination indicated by standard uptake value (SUV) measurements. Adapted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: European Journal of Immunology [120] Copyright Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA. (2012).
Figure 5Systemically-administered nLGs accumulate in tumor vasculature and enhance anti-tumor immunity
A. nLG and encapsulated cargo localize to and are retained in tumors over time after intravenous injection. B. Imaging of nLGs (green) in tumor vasculature. C. Therapeutic treatment with nLGs encapsulating IL-2 and TGF-β1 inhibitor enhance survival compared with soluble components or IL-2/TGF-β1 delivered alone in nLG. Adapted with permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nature Materials [143] copyright (2012).
Figure 6Capture of metastatic tumor cells through implantable scaffolds mimicking the pre-metastatic niche
Metastatic tumor cells accumulate in scaffolds implanted in A. the peritoneal fat-pad, but B. not in the fat-pad of scaffold-free mice. C. Metastatic tumor cells migrating to scaffolds result in lower metastatic tumor burden in lungs. D. Scaffolds delivering a CCL22 vector increase the accumulation of Gr1hiCD11b+ cells compared with a control vector (β-galactosidase). Adapted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nature Communications [137] copyright (2015).