| Literature DB >> 27743144 |
Amanda Tivnan1, Tatjana Heilinger2,3, Ed C Lavelle4,5,6, Jochen H M Prehn2.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is an aggressive brain tumour, associated with extremely poor prognosis and although there have been therapeutic advances, treatment options remain limited. This review focuses on the use of immunotherapy, harnessing the power of the host's immune system to reject cancer cells. Key challenges in glioma specific immunotherapy as with many other cancers are the limited immunogenicity of the cancer cells and the immunosuppressive environment of the tumour. Although specific antigens have been identified in several cancers; brain tumours, such as GBM, are considered poorly immunogenic. However, as detailed in this review, strategies aimed at circumventing these challenges are showing promise for GBM treatment; including identification of glioma specific antigens and endogenous immune cell activation in an attempt to overcome the immunosuppressive environment which is associated with GBM tumours. An up-to-date summary of current Phase I/II and ongoing Phase III GBM immunotherapy clinical trials is provided in addition to insights into promising preclinical approaches which are focused predominantly on increased induction of Type 1 helper T cell (Th1) immune responses within patients.Entities:
Keywords: Brain cancer; Glioblastoma; Immunotherapy; Vaccines
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27743144 PMCID: PMC5258809 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-016-2299-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Fig. 1Glioblastoma immunotherapy approaches. Immunotherapy is the process by which the host immune system is modulated in an attempt to generate a tumour-targeted response. These techniques, as outlined in the graphical summary above, include adoptive cell therapy (ACT) whereby the host immune system is stimulated to elicit a response, immunovirotherapy which involves the use of oncolytic viruses which are only capable of replication within cancer cells with subsequent cell lysis. Peptide vaccinations are developed through either tumour isolated, or synthesised, peptide fragment which, when combined with carrier protein adjuvants, are then used to vaccinate the host against a particular antigen; and finally dendritic cell-based therapy whereby tumour specific antigens (TSA) and tumour associated antigens (TAAs) are used to direct a dendritic cell-prompted immune response. Several of these techniques have entered Phase III clinical trials with respect to glioblastoma treatment
Peptide-based vaccines for GBM therapy, data collated from https://clinicaltrials.gov
| Name | Description | NCT number | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rinodepepimut (Rintega®, CDX-110) | EGFRvIII mutant targeting conjugated to keyhole limpet haemocyanin (KLH) carrier protein | NCT01480479 | Randomised Phase III currently underway initial Phase III showed increased PFS and OS from point of diagnosis |
| HSPPC-96 | An autologous heat-shock protein peptide complex-96 (HSPPC-96) vaccine for patients with recurrent GBM | NCT01814813 | Randomised Phase II single arm trial showed promise however lymphopenia was noted as an adverse side effect |
| ERC1671 | Whole GBM tumour cells and lysates from patient donors | NCT01903330 | Phase II results showed great promise with reduced tumour infiltration and no noted side effects |
| SL-701 | Synthetic multi-peptide immunotherapy consisting of three shortened peptides corresponding to IL-13, Rα2 and survivin that have been engineered with amino acid substitutions to increase immunostimulatory activity | NCT02078648 | Phase I/II, currently ongoing |
| NeoVax | Vaccine applicable to patients with MGMT-unmethylated status | NCT02287428 | Phase I currently ongoing until January 2018 |
| ADU-623 | A live-attenuated, double-deleted strain of the Gram-positive bacterium Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) encoding EGFRvIII and the cancer antigen NY-ESO-1 | NCT01967758 | Phase I due to complete in April 2017 |
| GAPVAC | Several actively personalised vaccines (APVACs) tailored to the characteristics of each individual patient’s tumour | NCT02149225 | Phase I due to be completed in July 2018 |
| IMA950 | Multipeptide vaccine Peptides in IMA950 comprise the following: brevican (BCAN); chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan 4 (CSPG4); fatty acid binding protein 7, brain (FABP7); insulin-like growth factor 2 mRNA binding protein 3 (IGF2BP3); neuroligin 4, X-linked (NLGN4X); neuronal cell adhesion molecule (NRCAM); protein tyrosine phosphatase, receptor-type, Z polypeptide 1 (PTPRZ1); tenascin C (TNC); Met proto-oncogene (MET); baculoviral IAP repeat-containing 5 (BIRC5); and hepatitis B virus core antigen | NCT01222221 and NCT01920191 | Phase I/II completed in March 2016 reported that IMA950 plus granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) was well tolerated with the primary immunogenicity endpoint of observing multi-tumour associated peptide responses in at least 30 % of patients exceeded. Further development of IMA950 is encouraged |
| Neoepitope-based Personalise vaccine approach | Personalised peptide vaccines | NCT02510950 | Pilot study Phase 0 due for completion in March 2019 |
| IDH R132H and PEPIDH1M | Trials to evaluate the safety and tolerability of and immune response to the IDH1 peptide vaccine in patients with IDH1R132H-mutated, WHO grade III-IV gliomas | NCT02454634 and NCT02193347 | Phase I trials, due for completion in August 2018 and June 2019, respectively |
DC-based vaccines for GBM therapy, data collated from https://clinicaltrials.gov
| Name | Description | NCT number | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| DCVax-L | Activated monocytes loaded with antigens from the patient’s own tumour tissue | NCT00045968 | Phase III, September 2016, ongoing |
| ICT-107 | NCT01280552 | Promising Phase I and II trials (Phuphanich et al. [ | |
| ICT-121 | Specifically targets CD133 | NCT02049489 | Phase I, due for completion in November 2017, |
| DC vaccine | Autologous dendritic cells pulsed with lysate derived from an allogeneic glioblastoma stem-like cell line for patients with newly diagnosed or recurrent glioblastoma | NCT02010606 | A phase I trial testing a dendritic cell vaccine for patients with newly diagnosed or recurrent glioblastoma, due for completion in October 2018 |
| DC vaccine | To demonstrate that dendritic cell vaccine loaded with tumor lysate is feasible and safe in pediatric and adult subjects with relapsed high grade glioma or glioblastoma multiforme | NCT01808820 | Phase I, due for completion in July 2018 |
| CMV-specific dendritic cell vaccines | Evaluation of overcoming limited migration and enhancing cytomegalovirus-specific Dendritic Cell Vaccines with adjuvant tetanus pre-conditioning in patients with newly-diagnosed GBM | NCT02366728 | Randomised Phase II, due for completion in June 2020 |
| CMV pp65 DCs | AVeRT: Anti-PD-1 Monoclonal Antibody (Nivolumab) in combination with DC vaccines for the treatment of recurrent Grade III and Grade IV brain tumours | NCT02529072 | Randomised phase I/II, due for completion in March 2019 |