| Literature DB >> 27248175 |
Anthony Cheung1,2, Heather J Bax1,3, Debra H Josephs1,3, Kristina M Ilieva1,2, Giulia Pellizzari1, James Opzoomer1, Jacinta Bloomfield1, Matthew Fittall1,2, Anita Grigoriadis2, Mariangela Figini4, Silvana Canevari4, James F Spicer3, Andrew N Tutt2, Sophia N Karagiannis1,2.
Abstract
Promising targeted treatments and immunotherapy strategies in oncology and advancements in our understanding of molecular pathways that underpin cancer development have reignited interest in the tumor-associated antigen Folate Receptor alpha (FRα). FRα is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored membrane protein. Its overexpression in tumors such as ovarian, breast and lung cancers, low and restricted distribution in normal tissues, alongside emerging insights into tumor-promoting functions and association of expression with patient prognosis, together render FRα an attractive therapeutic target. In this review, we summarize the role of FRα in cancer development, we consider FRα as a potential diagnostic and prognostic tool, and we discuss different targeted treatment approaches with a specific focus on monoclonal antibodies. Renewed attention to FRα may point to novel individualized treatment approaches to improve the clinical management of patient groups that do not adequately benefit from current conventional therapies.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; cancer; folate receptor alpha; immunotherapy; monoclonal antibodies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27248175 PMCID: PMC5239573 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.9651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1A model depicting FRα-mediated internalization of folates and regulation of cancer signaling
1) Folate binding to FRα could induce STAT3 activation via a GP130 co-receptor mediated JAK-dependent process. 2) FRα may form macromolecular complexes with LYN tyrosine kinase, which has been reported to regulate the phosphorylation of PEAK1 to promote ERK and STAT3 activation. 3) GPI-anchored FRα is internalized in caveolae vesicles and forms early endosomes, which undergo acidification and subsequent fusion with lysosomes to release FRα and folate. FRα is then translocated to the nucleus and acts directly as a transcription factor. 4) FRα acts as a folate transporter; a sufficient intake of folate is needed in rapidly proliferating cells for the one-carbon metabolic reaction and DNA biosynthesis, repair and methylation.
Figure 2FOLR1 gene expression levels in cancer models
A summary of gene expression data (generated from the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopaedia) showing the levels of mRNA expression for the FOLR1 gene on a logarithmic scale in various cancer cell types. (parentheses show number of cell lines per tumor type)
Figure 3Potential treatment approaches targeting FRα
1) Folate drug-conjugates: chemotherapeutic agents, such as vintafolide, have been conjugated to folate for FRα targeting. 2) Vaccines targeting FRα: autologous dendritic cells engineered with FRα mRNA commence an anti-FRα immune response, mediated by T-cells. 3) Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells: CAR T cells recognizing FRα trigger tumor cell killing. 4) Monoclonal antibodies (direct effects): Specific recognition of FRα lead to inhibition of downstream signaling events that cause tumor cell death. 5) Monoclonal antibodies (immune effector cell engagement): antibodies link FRα-expressing tumor cells with immune effector cells that bear Fc receptors, potentiate effector cell activation and target-neutralizing functions by engendering antibody-dependent effector cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC), phagocytosis (ADCP) or 6) complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) activation.
Key clinical trials of FRα-drug conjugate therapeutics
| Drug Name | Alternative Name(s) | Tumor Type | Trial Design | Efficacy Outcome | Safety Outcome | Imaging Outcome | Reference/Trial Number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vintafolide | EC145 Folate-conjugated DAVLBH | Platinum-resistant ovarian cancer | Randomized phase II trial of Vintafolide + PLD | Vintafolide demonstrated significantly improved clinical activity compared with PLD alone. Median PFS was 5.0 and 2.7 months for vintafolide + PLD and PLD-alone arms, respectively ( | Vintafolide + PLD was well tolerated. Frequency of leukopenia, neutropenia, abdominal pain, and peripheral sensory neuropathy was higher in vintafolide + PLD | N/A | [ |
| FR+ platinum-resistant ovarian cancer | Phase III study of vintafolide + PLD | At a prespecified interim data analysis, cessation of the study was recommended because vintafolide + PLD | No safety concerns were detailed | N/A | [ | ||
| FR+ NSCLC | Randomized, open-label, phase II trial of vintafolide as second-line treatment | Preliminary data for vintafolide + docetaxel showed improvement across all efficacy endpoints | The safety profile was manageable and consistent with the AEs observed with both therapies | N/A | [ | ||
| EC0225 |
Folate–desacetylvinblastine-hydrazide folate–mitomycin C | Solid tumors | Phase I study of EC0225 in patients with solid tumors (refractory or metastatic) | Disease stabilization (≥ 4 months) was observed in 26/63 patients | EC0225 was well -tolerated at doses ≤2.3 mg/m2. Most frequent AEs included anemia, constipation, leukopenia, fatigue. G3 hypotension and G4 neutropenia occurred in 1 patient each at the highest dose tested (2.88mg/m2) defining the MTD | N/A | [ |
| Epofolate | BMS-753493 Folate-conjugated epothilone A | Solid tumors | Phase I study of epothilone folate (BMS-753493) in patients with advanced solid tumors | Best overall response was SD in 19% patients. Median duration of response was 85 days. No correlation between FR status and response. Interim analysis indicated that the benefit risk profile of BMS-753493 was not favorable and did not support further investigation of this agent | The MTD was reached. DLTs included ALT and AST elevations, diarrhoea, nausea, fatigue, oesophagitis and mucosal inflammation | N/A | [ |
| EC0489 | Folate–desacetylvinblastine hydrazide with modified linker | Solid tumors | Phase I study of EC0489 in patients with refractory or metastatic tumors | Not reported | Patients treated at 2.5mg/m2 experienced toxicities characteristic of vinca alkaloids (e.g., mild neuropathy), but not significant constipation nor gastrointestinal-related toxicity | N/A | [ |
| EC1456 | Folate–tubulysin | TNBC, advanced NSCLC and ovarian cancer | Phase I dose-escalation study of EC1456 (Part A) including a study of efficacy in patients with TNBC, advanced NSCLC and ovarian cancer treated at the MTD (Part B) | Data awaited | Data awaited | N/A | NCT01999738 |
AE, adverse event; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; DLT, dose-limiting toxicity; G, CTCAE grade; MTD, maximum tolerated dose; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; PFS, progression-free survival; PLD, pegylated liposomal doxorubicin; SD, stable disease; TNBC, triple negative breast cancer. Clinical trial number (NCT) available from: http://clinicaltrials.gov.
Clinical trials of FRα-targeting vaccines and CAR T cells
| Drug Name | Alternative Name(s) | Tumor Type | Trial Design | Efficacy Outcome | Safety Outcome | Imaging Outcome | Reference/Trial Number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Folate Immune | EC90/GPI-0100/EC17 | Renal cell carcinoma | Phase I study of Folate Immune (EC90 vaccine administered with GPI-0100 adjuvant followed by EC17) in patients with renal cell carcinoma | 1/28 (4%) patients had a PR, 15/28 (54%) had SD | Two DLTs seen (G4 anaphylaxis and G3 pancreatitis). Mild - mod injection site reactions were most common AE during vaccination phase. Transient hypersensitivity reactions were most common during treatment phase | N/A | [ |
| Folate Immune | EC90/GPI-0100/EC17 | Renal cell carcinoma | Phase I study of Folate Immune (EC90 vaccine administered with GPI-0100 adjuvant followed by EC17) in patients with progressive metastatic renal cell carcinoma | Trial terminated due to poor patient accrual | N/A | NCT00485563 | |
| Autologous dendritic cells engineered with FRα mRNA | / | FRα+ serous papillary ovarian carcinoma | Single patient report of a patient with serous papillary ovarian carcinoma at second relapse (platinum-resistant) who received a vaccination regimen with autologous dendritic cells engineered with mRNA encoded FRα | CT before treatment and 3 months after the last vaccination (13 months total) demonstrated a PR. CA-125 greatly reduced 4 weeks after the first vaccination and were still at baseline at 11 months after completion of vaccination | Not reported | N/A | [ |
| CAR T Cells | |||||||
| CAR-T cells specific to FRα | / | Ovarian cancer | Phase I study of adoptive transfer of FRα redirected autologous T cells, either with high-dose IL-2 (cohort 1), or followed by immunization with allogeneic peripheral blood mononuclear cells (cohort 2), for recurrent ovarian cancer | No reduction in tumor burden was seen in any patient | 5/8 (63%) patients in cohort 1 experienced a G3 – 4 AE | Lack of specific localization of T cells to tumor was observed by tracking 111In-labeled adoptively transferred T cells | [ |
AE, adverse event; DLT, dose-limiting toxicity; G, CTCAE grade; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease. Clinical trial number (NCT) available from: http://clinicaltrials.gov.
Clinical trials of FRα-targeting monoclonal antibodies
| Drug Name | Alternative Name(s) | Tumor Type | Trial Design | Efficacy Outcome | Safety Outcome | Imaging Outcome | Reference/Trial Number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Farletuzumab | MORab003 | Platinum-resistant EOC | Phase I dose escalation study of weekly farletuzumab | Following 1 treatment cycle (4 weeks): No objective responses. SD in 36% patients and CA-125 reduction in 16% | No DLTs. MTD not reached | Radiolabeled tracer studies conducted in 3 patients showed significant tumor uptake | [ |
| Platinum-sensitive EOC | Phase II study of farletuzumab as single agent or in combination with a platinum and taxane in platinum-sensitive, recurrent epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer | Farletuzumab alone: 0% normalised CA125, 30% SD as best response, 70% PD. Farletuzumab + chemotherapy: 80.9% normalised CA125. ORR 75%. In 21%, the second progression-free interval was longer than the first | Farletuzumab well-tolerated as single agent, without additive toxicity when administered with chemotherapy. SAEs in 37% patients – 9% considered related to farletuzumab | N/A | [ | ||
| Platinum-sensitive EOC | Phase Ib safety study of farletuzumab, carboplatin and PLD in patients with platinum-sensitive EOC at first or second relapse | CR in one patient (7%), PRs in 10 patients (67%), SD in 4 patients (27%). | Combination well-tolerated - no farletuzumab-related G3-4 adverse events. | N/A | [ | ||
| Platinum-sensitive EOC | Phase III double-blind placebo-controlled study of weekly farletuzumab + carboplatin/taxane in platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer at first relapse. | Median PFS 9.0 (placebo), 9.5 (farletuzumab 1.25 mg/kg), and 9.7 (farletuzumab 2.5 mg/kg) months with no statistically significant difference between arms | Most common AEs across arms were those known to be associated with chemotherapy. | N/A | [ | ||
| Platinum-sensitive recurrent EOC with a low CA125 | Phase III global multicenter double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial of farletuzumab + platinum and a taxane or PLD in patients with first relapse of platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer and a low CA125 | Data awaited | Data awaited | N/A | NCT02289950 | ||
| Platinum-resistant EOC | Phase III double-blind placebo-controlled study of weekly farletuzumab + paclitaxel in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer at relapse | Predefined criteria for trial continuation were not met. | Trial terminated | N/A | NCT00738699 | ||
| FRα+ TNBC with low levels of CA125 | Phase II trial of farletuzumab in FRα+ TNBC with low levels of CA125 | Data awaited | Data awaited | N/A | [ | ||
| NSCLC (adenoCa) | Phase II randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter study of a platinum containing doublet +/− farletuzumab in stage IV adenocarcinoma of the lung | Data awaited | Data awaited | N/A | NCT01218516 | ||
| MOv18 IgG | / | Ovarian carcinoma | Phase I single infusion dose-escalating study of cMOv18 IgG in patients with primary, residual or recurrent ovarian cancer | Efficacy outcomes not reported | No DLT observed. At doses of 350mg all patients experienced G2 side effects, including fever, headache, and nausea/vomiting | N/A | [ |
| 131I-cMOv18 IgG1 | / | Ovarian carcinoma | Kinetics and tissue distribution of 131I-cMOv18 IgG1 in patients with ovarian carcinoma | Not reported | Not reported | Good localisation in ovarian carcinoma tissue | [ |
| Ovarian carcinoma | Phase I study of i.p. radioimmunotherapy with 131I-mMOv18 IgG1 in patients with ovarian cancer with minimal residual disease | 5/16 patients had a CR, 6/16 patients had SD and 5/16 patients had PD | Minimal toxicities observed. One patient mild and transient bone marrow suppression | N/A | [ | ||
| Ovarian carcinoma | Phase I study of i.p. and i.v. radioimmunotherapy with 131I-cMOv18 IgG1 in patients with suspected ovarian cancer scheduled to undergo exploratory laparotomy | Efficacy outcomes not reported | No normal organ toxicity | Tumor uptake in ovarian cancer tissue 3.4% - 12.3% ID/kg for i.p. and 3.6% - 5.4% ID/kg for i.v. administration | [ | ||
| 125I-, 123I-, 131I-, cMOv18 IgG1 | / | Ovarian carcinoma | Study of simultaneous i.v. and i.p injection of radiolabeled c-MOv18 (using different radionuclides) in patients with ovarian cancer to determine the optimum way to deliver radiolabeled cMOv18 | Not reported | No AEs reported | No significant differences found in tumor:normal tissue and tumor:blood ratios for both i.v. and i.p routes. Tumor uptake varied between patients and within same patient | [ |
| MOv18 IgE | / | FRα+ advanced tumors | Phase I: First in human study of MOv18 IgE in patients with FRα+ advanced cancer | Data awaited | Data awaited | N/A | NCT02546921 |
AE, adverse event; cMOv18, chimeric MOv18; CR, complete response; DLT, dose-limiting toxicity; EOC, epithelial ovarian cancer; G, CTCAE grade; i.p., intraperitoneal; i.v., intravenous; MTD, maximum tolerated dose; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; ORR, overall response rate; PD, progressive disease; PFS, progression-free survival; PLD, pegylated liposomal doxorubicin; PR, partial response; SAE, serious adverse event; SD, stable disease; TNBC, triple negative breast cancer. Clinical trial numbers (NCT) available from: http://clinicaltrials.gov.