| Literature DB >> 27119110 |
Benjamin Ruf1, Ulrich M Lauer1.
Abstract
Over the past two decades, a considerable amount of oncolytic vector families has entered numerous clinical trials. However, to this date, the field has not yet been able to come to a common understanding regarding the best possible ways to administer oncolytic viruses to cancer patients. This is mainly due to the fact that so far clinical trials being designed for head-to-head comparisons (such as using two different virotherapeutics originating from two distinct virus families being applied via identical routes in the same types of cancer) are still missing. Hence, there is no consent (i) on the best route of virotherapeutics administration (e.g., systemic versus intratumoral), (ii) on the virus dosages to be applied, (iii) on dosing intervals, and (iv) on the numbers of repetitive courses of virus administration. As the detailed comparison of clinical virotherapy trial regimens is time-consuming and complex, we here present an overview of current state-of-the-art virotherapeutic application schemes. Notably, our comprehensive assessment culminates in raising two rough classifications of virotherapeutic strategies, i.e., "hit hard and early" versus "killing softly". In order to find out which one of these two gross alternatives might be most successful for each and every tumor entity, we here suggest the implementation of phase 1/2 studies, which primarily aim at a repetitive sampling and analysis of tumor samples in cancer patients treated with oncolytic viruses reading out (i) virus-specific, (ii) tumor-specific as well as (iii) immunotherapeutic parameters. On this basis, a rational design of significantly improved virotherapeutic application schemes should be possible in the future.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 27119110 PMCID: PMC4782955 DOI: 10.1038/mto.2015.18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther Oncolytics ISSN: 2372-7705 Impact factor: 7.200
Selected clinical trials using oncolytic vector systems as monotherapeutic agents
| Adenovirus | ColoAd1 (enadenotucirev) | Intratumoral/intravenous | NCT02053220;[ | |
| Intravenous | One triple-hit course (d1, d3, d5) | NCT02028442 | ||
| ICOVIR-5 | Intravenous | Weekly intravenous infusions of bone marrow–derived autologous mesenchymal stem cells infected with ICOVIR-5 (=CELYVIR) | NCT01844661 | |
| Intravenous | Single shot | NCT01864759 | ||
| CG0070 | Intravesical | Weekly intravesical administration (6 courses) | NCT01438112 | |
| Intravesical | NCT00109655;[ | |||
| DNX-2401 (Delta-24-RGD) | Intratumoral | Single shot | NCT00805376 | |
| Intraperitoneal | Triple-hit course (d1, d3, d5) | NCT00562003;[ | ||
| Coxsackievirus | CAVATAK | Intratumoral | 10 intratumoral injections over 18 weeks (d1, d3, d5, d8, d22, d43, d64, d86, d106 + d127) | NCT01227551;[ |
| Intratumoral | NCT00832559 | |||
| Intratumoral | Two injections (d1, d3) | NCT00438009 | ||
| Intratumoral | Single shot | NCT00235482 | ||
| Herpes simplex virus | Talimogene laherparepvec (T-Vec/OncoVEX) | Intratumoral | First injection on d1, second course 3 weeks from initial dose, all subsequent courses every 2 weeks | NCT02014441 |
| Intratumoral | First injection on d1, second course 3 weeks from initial dose, all subsequent courses every 2 weeks | NCT00769704;[ | ||
| Intratumoral | See above; up to 24 courses | NCT00289016;[ | ||
| Intratumoral | Three injections every 3 weeks (plus max. three additional courses) | NCT00402025;[ | ||
| M032 | Intra-/peritumoral | Single shot | NCT02062827 | |
| Seprehvir (HSV 1716) | Intravenous/intratumoral | NCT00931931;[ | ||
| Intrapleural | NCT01721018 | |||
| Intra-/peritumoral | Single shot | NCT02031965 | ||
| HF10 | Intratumoral | NCT01017185;[ | ||
| rRp450 | Into hepatic artery | 4 courses every 1–2 weeks | NCT01071941 | |
| Measles vaccine virus (Edmonston strain) | MV-CEA | Intratumoral/into resection bed | NCT00390299 | |
| Intraperitoneal | Every 4 weeks for up to 6 courses | NCT00408590;[ | ||
| MV-NIS | Intrapleural | Every 4 weeks for up to 6 courses | NCT01503177 | |
| Intraperitoneal | Every 4 weeks for up to 6 courses | NCT00408590;[ | ||
| Intraperitoneal | NCT02068794 | |||
| Intratumoral | Single shot | NCT01846091 | ||
| Intravenous | NCT00450814;[ | |||
| Parvovirus | ParvOryx | Intratumoral/intravenous | Two courses (d1, d10) | NCT01301430;[ |
| Polio virus (Sabin strain) | PVS-RIPO | Intratumoral | Single shot | NCT01491893;[ |
| Reovirus (Dearing strain) | Reolysin | Intratumoral | Single shot | NCT00528684;[ |
| Intravenous | Up to 12 quintuple-hit courses (d1–5) every 4 weeks | NCT00651157;[ | ||
| Intravenous | Quintuple-hit courses (d1–5) every 4 weeks | NCT00503295;[ | ||
| Intravenous/intraperitoneal | Administration i.v. as quintuple-hit courses (d1–5) every 4 weeks + additional i.p. administration on 2 consecutive days beginning with course 2 | NCT00602277 | ||
| Intravenous | Up to 12 quintuple-hit courses (d1–5) every 4 weeks | NCT01533194 | ||
| Intravenous | Up to 12 quintuple-hit-courses (d1–5) every 4 weeks | NCT01240538 | ||
| Senecca Valley virus | NTX-010 | Intravenous | Single shot | NCT01017601;[ |
| Intravenous | Single shot | NCT00314925;[ | ||
| Vaccinia virus (Lister strain) | GL-ONC1 (GLV-1h68) | Intraperitoneal | Every 4 weeks (4 courses) | NCT01443260;[ |
| Intrapleural | Single shot | NCT01766739 | ||
| Intravenous | NCT00794131;[ | |||
| Vaccinia virus (Western Reserve strain) | vvDD-CDSR (JX-929) | Intratumoral/intravenous | Single shot | NCT00574977;[ |
| Vaccinia virus (Wyeth strain) | JX-594 (pexastimogene devacirepvec, Pexa-Vec) | Intratumoral | Three courses every 2 weeks | NCT00554372;[ |
| Intratumoral | Every 3 weeks (max. 8 courses) | NCT00629759;[ | ||
| Intratumoral | Weekly (up to 6 courses) | NCT00429312;[ | ||
| Intravenous | Single shot | NCT00625456;[ | ||
| Intravenous | Every 2 weeks (up to 4 courses) | NCT01380600;[ | ||
| Intravenous | Treatment on d1, d8, d22 and weeks 6, 12, 18 | NCT01387555;[ | ||
| Intravenous | Weekly for 5 weeks (followed by up to 3 additional infusion boosts) | NCT01394939 | ||
| Intravenous | Weekly for 5 weeks, then every 3 weeks | NCT02017678 | ||
| Intravenous | Every 2 weeks | NCT01469611 | ||
| Intravenous | Weekly for 5 weeks (treatment extension: i.v. infusion every 3 weeks in case of stable disease) | NCT01636284 | ||
| Vesicular stomatitis virus | VSV-IFN-β | Intratumoral | Single shot | NCT01628640 |
Figure 1Selected application schemes of MV-CEA (a+b): (b) published by Galanis et al.[14]
Figure 2Selected application schemes of MV-NIS (a–e): (a) published by Galanis et al.[15] (d) published by Russell et al.[17]
Figure 3Selected application schemes of JX-594 (a-f): (a) published by Heo et al.,[68] (b) presented at ASCO 2013,[20] (c) published by Park et al.,[21] (d) published by Hwang et al.,[7] (e) presented at ASCO 2013,[22] (f) published by Breitbach et al.[23]
Figure 4Selected application schemes for GL-ONC1 (a–c): (a) presented at ASCO 2013,[29] (b) presented at ASCO 2013.[30]
Figure 5Selected application schemes for Talimogene laherparepvec (a–d): (a) presented at ASCO 2014,[32] (b) published by Senzer et al.,[35] (d) presented at ASCO 2012.[36]
Figure 6Selected application schemes for Adenoviridae ICOVIR-5 (a+b) and ColoAd1 (c+d): (c) presented at ASCO 2014.[47]
Figure 7Selected application schemes for Reolysin (a–f): (a) published by Forsyth et al.,[53] (b) Published by Galanis et al.,[24] (c) presented at ASCO 2009.[54]
Figure 8Prime-boost/single-shot paradigms of virotherapeutics application schemes: (b) The prime-boost paradigm (upper panel) encompasses a huge variation in the number of application courses of oncolytic viruses either applied as single-hit (d1 only) or multiple-hit courses (d1, d2, …, dx). Here, priming of an antitumor immune response (depicted in the left part of the panel) is the result of initial tumor cell infection and colonization (①), replication (②) and subsequent oncolysis (③). After eventual decrease of this primary antitumor immune response, the second and every following course of repetitive virus application is used under the premise (i) to further debulk remaining tumors using once again mechanisms of direct virus-mediated oncolysis (①+②+③) and (ii) boosting the antitumor immune response (depicted in the right part of the panel) by releasing concealed tumor antigens within the meaning of an antitumor vaccination.[3] Preferential route of administration here is an intratumoral injection, as a rapid neutralization of viruses by a simultaneously triggered antiviral immune response (depicted by a red arrow-type rectangle) can be avoided. In addition, multiple-hit courses in the prime-boost setting are limited by an antiviral immune response as well, since the adaptive immune response is fully qualified often at the latest 7 days after the first injection and thus further virus applications are considered as ineffective. Therefore, intervals between courses have to find a balance between attacking the tumor as soon as possible and simultaneously avoiding premature neutralization of the virotherapeutic vectors. The single-shot paradigm (lower panel) is in accordance with the initial understanding of the “Oncolytic virotherapy paradigm”,[10] as it is believed that a single systemic administration of oncolytic viruses leads to a systemic spread with subsequent selective primary infection (①) of the primary site of the tumor as well as of disseminated metastases. Self-amplification/replication (②) of virotherapeutic vectors is followed by direct tumor cell (onco-)lysis (③) and recognition of infected tumor cells by the innate host immune system with subsequent clearance of residual tumor masses through a tumor antigen triggered adaptive host-immune response (④). Basic prerequisite for a successful utilization of the single-shot paradigm is to maximize the initial dosage of applied infectious particles as dose-dependent tumor colonization (⑤) and subsequent oncolysis of disseminated tumors is only achievable if a viremic threshold is passed.[50] Below this threshold, systemically administered virus particles are immediately neutralized by preexisting antibodies or serum factors, such as complement.[69] (b) The prime-boost paradigm in rare cases of success addresses rare patient specific defects in the antiviral immune response being so far undetected and clinically silent. Thereby, a prolonged replication/oncolysis (for several weeks) generating quasi prime-boost situation is probably generated with the help of nature.