| Literature DB >> 27660710 |
Hiep Khong1, Willem W Overwijk1.
Abstract
Cancer therapies based on T cells have shown impressive clinical benefit. In particular, immune checkpoint blockade therapies with anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1/PD-L1 are causing dramatic tumor shrinkage and prolonged patient survival in a variety of cancers. However, many patients do not benefit, possibly due to insufficient spontaneous T cell reactivity against their tumors and/or lacking immune cell infiltration to tumor site. Such tumor-specific T cell responses could be induced through anti-cancer vaccination; but despite great success in animal models, only a few of many cancer vaccine trials have demonstrated robust clinical benefit. One reason for this difference may be the use of potent, effective vaccine adjuvants in animal models, vs. the use of safe, but very weak, vaccine adjuvants in clinical trials. As vaccine adjuvants dictate the type and magnitude of the T cell response after vaccination, it is critical to understand how they work to design safe, but also effective, cancer vaccines for clinical use. Here we discuss current insights into the mechanism of action and practical application of vaccine adjuvants, with a focus on peptide-based cancer vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: Adjuvant; Cancer vaccine; Checkpoint; Peptide; T cells
Year: 2016 PMID: 27660710 PMCID: PMC5028954 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-016-0160-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Mechanisms of action of vaccine adjuvant. Left, some adjuvants can function as antigen delivery systems to affect the geographical availability of the antigen (signal 1). Right, adjuvants also commonly stimulate antigen presenting cells (APC) and induce them to upregulate co-stimulatory molecules such as CD80/CD86 (signal 2) and/or produce cytokines such as IL-12 (signal 3). VdLN: vaccination site-draining lymph node
Examples of class I adjuvants (delivery systems)
| Mode of action(s) | Types of response | Pros | Cons | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IFA and Montanide formulations | Depot | Ab, Th1, Th2 | Widely used for vaccines when antibody production is desired [ | May not suitable for therapeutic vaccine when cellular response is desired as extended depot will attract CTL to vaccine sites [ |
| Aluminum | Depot, inflammasome activation | Ab, Th2 | Safety characters are well defined as it is the most widely used adjuvant [ | Needs to be combined with other adjuvants to induce CTL response in therapeutic vaccines. |
| Micro/nano particles | Varies, depending on particlenature: increase Ag half-life (via encapsulation, sustained release) delivery Ag to target cells/organs, cellular and Inflammation induction (see text for detail) | Not well defined but size of articles may contribute to types of response: size of 40–50 nm induces stronger T cell response than 20nm or 2000 nm particles 4. | Reduce Ag dose, cellular and biological characters are well defined, versatile to be combined with other adjuvants [ | Rapid clearance in blood and accumulation in filtering organs such as liver and spleen [ |
Examples of class 2 adjuvants (immunopotentiators)
| Receptor | Target cells | Stage of development (not comprehensive) in cancer vaccine | |
|---|---|---|---|
| “stepping on the gas” | |||
| Pam3CSK4 | TLR2 | DC, M$, lymphocytes | Preclinical |
| Poly-ICLC | TLR3 | cDC, M$, epithelial cells | Several clinical trials for different cancers. |
| MPLA | TLR4 | cDC, M$, epithelial cells, fibroblasts | Clinical trial phase 2 |
| Imiquimod | TLR7/8 | pDC, B cells, M$, monocytes | Clinically approved for treating basal cell carcinoma. Multiple clinical trials in combination with vaccine for different cancers. |
| CpG | TLR9 | pDc, B cells | Multiple clinical trials |
| IL-2 | IL-2Ra/p/y | T, B and NK cells | Clinically approved for treating renal carcinoma and melanoma. Multiple clinical trials in combination with vaccine for different cancers. |
| GM-CSF | GM-CSFR | many | Multiple clinical trials in combination with vaccine and checkpoint blockades for different cancers. |
| IFNs | IFNR | many | Multiple clinical trials |
| CDNs | STING | many | Preclinical |
| “releasing the brake” | |||
| a-PD1 Ab | PD-1 | T, B and NK cells | Clinically approved for different cancers. |
| a-CTLA4 Ab | CTLA-4 | T cells | Clinically approved for melanoma, under multiple clinical trials for different cancers. |