| Literature DB >> 28512387 |
So Young Yoo1,2,3,4, Narayanasamy Badrinath1,2, Hyun Young Woo3,4, Jeong Heo3,4.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma is highly refractory cancer which is resistant to conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy, carrying a dismal prognosis. Although many anticancer drugs have been developed for treating HCC, sorafenib is the only effective treatment, but it only prolongs survival duration for about 3 months. Recently, oncolytic virotherapy has shown promising results in treating HCCs and the effects can be more enhanced by adopting immune modulatory molecules. This review discusses the current status of treating HCC and the effective strategy of oncolytic virus-based immunotherapy for the treatment of HCCs.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28512387 PMCID: PMC5415860 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5198798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
TKI and mAbs approved by FDA for use of cancer therapy.
| Category | Name | Targets | Uses |
|---|---|---|---|
| TKI | Dasatinib | BCR-ABL, SRC family, c-KIT, PDGFR | Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), |
| Erlotinib | EGFR | Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), | |
| Gefitinib | EGFR | NSCLC | |
| Imatinib | BCR-ABL, c-KIT, PDGFR | Acute lymphocytic leukemia, CML, | |
| Lapatinib | HER2/neu, EGFR | Breast cancer | |
| Sorafenib | BRAF, VEGFR, EGFR, PDGFR | Renal cell carcinoma (RCC), | |
| Sunitinib | VEGFR, PDGFR, c-KIT, FLT3 | RCC, gastrointestinal stromal tumor | |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR, VEGF | RCC | |
| Pazopanib | VEGFR-1, VEGFR-2, VEGFR-3, | RCC | |
| Nilotinib | BCR-ABL | CML | |
| Crizotinib | ALK, HGFR | NSCLC | |
| Vemurafenib | BRAF | Late-stage melanoma | |
| mAb | Alemtuzumab | CD52 | Chronic lymphocytic leukemia |
| Bevacizumab | VEGF | Colorectal cancer, NSCLC, RCC | |
| Cetuximab | EFGR | Colorectal cancer, head and neck cancer | |
| Gemtuzumab ozogamicin | CD33 | Relapsed acute myeloid leukemia | |
| Ibritumomab tiuxetan | CD20 | Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) | |
| Panitumumab | EGFR | Colorectal cancer | |
| Rituximab | CD20 | NHL | |
| Tositumomab | CD20 | NHL (with iodine-131) | |
| Trastuzumab | HER2/neu | Breast cancer with HER2/neu overexpression | |
| Ipilimumab | CTLA-4 | Late-stage melanoma |
Representative OVs used in preclinical studies.
| Virus strain | Modification | Therapeutic gene | HCC cell lines used | Animal model | Dose (pfu) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus, CV890 |
| None, combination | HepG2, Huh7, | BALB/c nude mice | 1 × 1011 IV | [ |
| Adenovirus, | Deletion of |
| Hep3B, BEL7404, | BALB/c nude mice | 2 × 109 IT | [ |
| Adenovirus, CNHK500 | Human telomerase reverse |
| Hep3B, HepGII, and | BALB/c nude mice, | 2 × 108–2 × 109 IT | [ |
| Adenovirus, CNHK300 |
|
| HepGII and Hep3B | No animal model used | MOI of | [ |
| Adenovirus, | E1B |
| Hep-G2 and BEL7404 | BALB/c nude mice, | 2 × 109 IT | [ |
| Adenovirus, SG7011let7T | Insertion of eight | miRNA, | HepG2, Hep3B, | BALB/c nude mice, | 5 × 108 IT | [ |
| Adenovirus, Telomelysin |
|
| Human: Huh-7, | HBx transgenic mice, | Low: 1.25 × 108 | [ |
| Adenovirus, | Mutated in |
| Hep3B and HuH7 | Athymic nude mice, | 2 × 108 | [ |
| HSV, designated | Viral glycoprotein H gene linked with |
| HuH-7, HepG2, | Hsd: athymic (nu/nu) mice, | 5 × 106 IT | [ |
| HSV, G47Δ | ICP47 and | None | HepG2, HepB, SMMC-7721, BEL-7404, and BEL-7405 | Balb/c nude mice SMMC-7721, | 2 × 107 IT | [ |
| MeV, (Res + MeV) | Encoding of | None | HepG2 and Hep3B | No animal model used | Various MOIs | [ |
| NDV | L289A mutation within the | None | HepG2 and Huh7 | Buffalo rats | 108 TCID50/rat HAI | [ |
| VV, JX-594 | Deletion of |
| None | Immunocompetent, | Rabbit: | [ |
| VV, JX-963 | Deletion of |
| None | Immunocompetent, | Various IV | [ |
| VV, GLV-1 h68 | Deletion of | None | HuH7 and | Athymic Nude- | 5 × 106 IV | [ |
| VV, GLV-1 h68 | Deletion of TK and insertion of Renilla luciferasegreen | None | Huh-7, Hep 3B, | No animal model used | MOI of 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, and 1 | [ |
| VV, GLV-2b-372 | Deletion of | None | Huh-7, Hep G2, | Athymic nude mice | 1 × 105 IT | [ |
| VSV, rVSV-GFP | Insertion of | None | Human: Hep 3B and Hep G2 | Buffalo rats | 1 × 108 IT | [ |
| VSV, rVSV- | Insertion of | None | McA-RH7777 | Buffalo rats | 1.3 × 107 HAI | [ |
| VSV, rVSV-NDV/F(L289A) | Insertion of | None | Human: Hep 3B and | Buffalo rats, orthotopic syngeneic McA-RH7777 | 1.3 × 107 HAI | [ |
| VSV, rVSV-NDV/F(L289A) | Insertion of | None | Human: Hep 3B and | Buffalo rats, orthotopic syngeneic McA-RH7777 | 1.3 × 107 HAI | [ |
| VSV, rVSV(MΔ51)-M3 | MΔ51deletion and M3 addition | None | McA-RH7777 | Buffalo rats | 5.0 × 107–5.0 × 109 HAI | [ |
IV: intravenous; IT: intratumoral; MOI: multiplicity of infection.
Figure 1JX-594 was generated as insertion of human GM-CSF and β-galactosidase at in between early/late promoter of TK gene. GM-CSF is an immune-stimulatory cytokine, which induces immune response against tumor cells.
Clinical trial outcomes in HCC patients.
| Virus strain | Modification | Phase | Dose (pfu) | Route | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus, |
| I | 3 × 1011 | IV | Tolerability was shown in patients but | [ |
| Vaccinia virus, | Deletion of | I | 108, 3 × 108, 109, or 3 × 109 | IT | Well toleration, 1 × 109 pfu, was | [ |
| Vaccinia virus, JX-594 | Deletion of | I | 3 × 106 | IT | Induction of antivascular cytokines and suppressed HBV replication | [ |
| Vaccinia virus, JX-594 | Deletion of | I | 108 or 109 | IT | Safety and efficacy of JX-594 followed by sorafenib: well toleration and | [ |
| Vaccinia virus, JX-594 | Deletion of | II | 108 or 109 | Intravascular fusion | Subject survival duration was | [ |
Figure 2Future prospective for HCC treatment: combination therapy of oncolytic virus with immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) blockades. Oncolytic virus enters into cancer cells and replicates in cytosol. It causes oncolysis and activation of neoantigens, which was released from lysed cancer cells. This phenomenon activates immune mechanism against surrounding cancer cells. ICI blockades inhibits action of CTLA-4, PD-L1, and PD-L2 in the liver cells.