Literature DB >> 28860827

Clinical applications of dendritic cells-cytokine-induced killer cells mediated immunotherapy for pancreatic cancer: an up-to-date meta-analysis.

Yucai Zhang1, Xiaorui Zhang1, Anqi Zhang2, Ke Li2, Kai Qu3.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study aimed to systematically evaluate the efficacy and safety of dendritic cells-cytokine-induced killer (DC-CIK) cells immunotherapy in treating pancreatic cancer (PC) patients.
METHODS: Data were collected from published articles of clinical trials. Databases including Web of Science, EMBASE, PubMed, Cochrane Library, Wanfang, and CNKI were searched. The main outcome measures in this research included the overall response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR), overall survival (OS), patients' quality of life (QoL), immune function, and adverse events. Comparative analysis was conducted between DC-CIK immunotherapy and chemotherapy (combined therapy) and chemotherapy alone.
RESULTS: This analysis covered 14 trials with 1,088 PC patients involved. The combined therapy showed advantages over chemotherapy alone in ORR (odds ratio [OR] =1.69, 95% confidence interval [CI] =1.20-2.38, P=0.003), DCR (OR =2.33, 95% CI =1.63-3.33, P<0.00001), OS (1-year OS, OR =3.61, 95% CI =2.41-5.40, P<0.00001; 3-year OS, OR =2.65, 95% CI =1.56-4.50, P=0.0003) and patients' QoL (P<0.01) with statistical significance. After immunotherapy, lymphocyte subsets' percentages of CD3+ (P<0.00001), CD4+ (P=0.01), CD3+CD56+ (P<0.00001), and cytokine levels of IFN-γ (P<0.00001) were significantly increased, and the percentages of CD4+CD25+CD127low (P<0.00001) and levels of IL-4 (P<0.0001) were significantly decreased, whereas analysis on CD8+ (P=0.59) and CD4+/CD8+ ratio (P=0.64) did not show a significant difference.
CONCLUSION: The combination of DC-CIK immunotherapy and chemotherapy is effective for PC treatment, indicated by prolonging the PC patients' survival time, which benefit from reconstructed immune function of patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cytokine-induced killer cells; dendritic cells; immunotherapy; meta-analysis; pancreatic cancer

Year:  2017        PMID: 28860827      PMCID: PMC5574601          DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S143382

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Onco Targets Ther        ISSN: 1178-6930            Impact factor:   4.147


Introduction

Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a fatal disease with high mortality and poor prognosis.1 It is the twelfth most common cancer and is the seventh leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the world with 338,000 new cases per year.2 In recent years, PC incidence has been significantly raised. The median overall survival (OS) of patients with advanced PC is 4–6 months,3 and the 5-year OS rate is <10%.4 Common therapeutic options for PC are surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy,3 but none of these strategies were able to thoroughly remove small residuals and metastatic cells, which is a main problem to be solved in tumor therapeutics. Therefore, effective therapeutic method should be developed. Adoptive cellular immunotherapy has demonstrated efficacy for the treatment of various malignant tumors, especially dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer (DC–CIK) cells mediate immunotherapy.5,6 Compared to immunotherapy using other types of cells, such as lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells,7,8 natural killer (NK) cells,9,10 and other immune cells,11,12 DC–CIK-mediated immunotherapy exhibited a stronger antitumor ability and broader antitumor spectrum.13,14 Cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cell is a heterogeneous subset of T lymphocytes, which primarily consist of CD3+CD56+ cells and is easy to be collected from human peripheral and umbilical cord blood, and subsequently induced by IFN-γ, anti-CD3 monoclonal antibodies (OKT-3), and IL-2 in vitro.6 DC are the most potent antigen-presenting cells. DC have the capacity to enhance CIK’s cytotoxicity by coculture with CIK cells, which is indicated by increased proportion of CD3+CD56+ cells and improved levels of cytokines such as IFN-γ and IL-2.5,15 Clinical application of DC–CIK immunotherapy for PC has been reported in several clinical trials.16–19 In a meta-analysis comparing cellular immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy and chemotherapy alone, the former showed significantly prolonged OS,3 while the discussed outcomes were not complete. Analysis considering overall response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR), patients’ quality of life (QoL) and safety were not involved in this analysis. Moreover, the immunotherapy regimens among studies were different (including DC, NK, and LAK), which may influence the analysis of clinical therapy. Our study focused on PC patients treated by DC–CIK immunotherapy and chemotherapy combined therapy or chemotherapy alone, and we performed an up-to-date meta-analysis to provide reliable evidence on the efficacy and safety of DC–CIK immunotherapy in treating PC patients.

Methods

Search strategy and selection criteria

Data were collected from Web of Science, EMBASE, PubMed, Cochrane Library, Wanfang, and CNKI databases using the key terms of “dendritic cells”, “cytokine-induced killer cells” combined with “pancreatic cancer”. No language limits were applied. Literature published before May 2017 was involved in our analysis. The main selection criteria are that PC patients in the experimental group underwent DC–CIK immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy and patients in the control group were treated by chemotherapy alone.

Data collection and quality assessment

Literature screening and data extraction were carried out by two independent reviewers (YZ and XZ), and disagreements were eliminated upon discussing with a third researcher (AZ). Extracted information included first author’s names, years of publication, study locations, tumor stages, number of cases, patient ages, therapeutic regimens, administration route, in vitro cell culture conditions, and dosages of utilized immune cells. The quality of the included trials was evaluated based on Cochrane Handbook.20

Treatment efficacy

Treatment efficacy was assessed in terms of the complete response (CR) rates, partial response (PR) rates, stable disease (SD) rates, progressive disease (PD) rates, ORR, (ORR = CR + PR) and DCR (DCR = CR + PR + SD). Prognosis was estimated by OS, which was defined as the length of time from the start of treatment to the death of patient from any cause,21 patients’ QoL, and adverse events. Immune function of PC patients before and after treatment was determined by lymphocyte subsets’ percentages (CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD3+CD56+, and CD4+CD25+CD127low) and cytokines secretion levels (IFN-γ and IL-4).

Statistical analysis

This meta-analysis was performed using RevMan 5.2 (version 5.2, Nordic Cochran Centre, Copenhagen, Denmark). P<0.05 indicates the statistical significance of the difference. Heterogeneity among studies was assessed to determine suitable analysis model.5,22 Cochran’s Q test was performed to evaluate the homogeneity, and funnel plots were used to assess the publication bias of included studies. I2<50% or P>0.1 indicated that the studies were homogenous. Odds ratio (OR) was the principal measurement for treatment efficacy and is presented with a 95% confidence interval (CI). Sensitivity analysis was conducted to evaluate the consistency of the results and evaluate the influence of single studies on overall risk estimate.23

Results

Search results

A total of 2,127 articles were identified upon initial retrieve; 2,082 articles were excluded because they lacked clinical trial (n=1,876), were unrelated studies (n=64), and were duplicated (n=142). After a detailed assessment of full texts, 14 reviews or meta-analyses, 10 articles without control group, and seven papers with insufficient data were excluded. Finally, 14 papers of clinical trials that included a total of 1,088 patients were eligible for inclusion in this meta-analysis (Figure 1).16,17,24–35
Figure 1

Flow diagram of the selection process.

Patient’s characteristics

All of the involved trials turn out to be conducted in China. In total, 513 PC patients in eight trials were treated by DC-CIK in combination with chemotherapy, while 575 patients in six trials were treatment by CIK alone. Detailed clinical information of the patients is presented in Table 1. DC and CIK cells were obtained from autologous peripheral blood, confirming free of bacterial and fungal contaminations before venous transfusion to the patients. Information of DC–CIK mediate immunotherapy is shown in Table 2.
Table 1

Clinical information from the eligible trials in the meta-analysis

Included studiesNationTumor stagePatients, exp/conAge (years)
Parameter types
ExpCon
Ge and Ge (2016)24ChinaI–IV50/5057.7±4.6 (mean)57.5±4.7 (mean)OS, LYM subsets
Kang and Zhang (2016)25ChinaKps >6022/2265.1±6.3 (mean)66.1±6.3 (mean)ORR, DCR, QoL
Li (2016)26ChinaKps ≥7027/27NDNDOS, ORR, DCR, QoL, AE
Liu (2012)27ChinaI–IV25/25NDNDLYM subsets, cytokines
Mu et al (2016)28ChinaIII–IV90/9056.5±8.3 (mean)57.8±7.3 (mean)ORR, DCR, LYM subsets, AE
Shen et al (2015)29ChinaIII–IV38/3662 (median)66 (median)ORR, DCR
Wang (2015)30ChinaI–IV10/3064.3±3.1 (mean)63.8±3.4 (mean)ORR, DCR
Wang et al (2013)16ChinaPs ≤228/30NDNDORR, DCR, AE
Wang et al (2016)17ChinaPs <325/5<65 (14)<65 (38)OS, ORR, DCR, AE
Wen et al (2013)31ChinaND30/3063.5±13.2 (mean)65.3±12.8 (mean)OS, ORR, DCR
Zhang et al (2013)32ChinaKps >6058/6863 (median)65 (median)ORR, DCR, QoL
Zhang (2014)33ChinaI–IV30/30NDNDOS, LYM subsets, cytokines
Zhang et al (2016)34ChinaND40/4055.9±8.7 (mean)56.8±8.2 (mean)OS
Zheng et al (2016)35ChinaI–IV40/4039–8235–83OS, LYM subsets

Notes: Con, control group (chemotherapy alone group); Exp, experimental group (chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy).

Abbreviations: AE, adverse reaction; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; DCR, disease control rate; Kps, Karnofsky Performance Score; LYM, lymphocyte; ND, not determined; OS, overall survival; ORR, overall response rate; Ps, performance status score; QoL, quality of life.

Table 2

Information of DC–CIK immunotherapy

Included studiesTherapeutic regimen
Administration routeCulture conditionsCell dose (cycles)
Experimental groupControl group
Ge and Ge (2016)24Con Reg + DC–CIKGemcitabine + oxaliplatin +5-FuIntravenous infusionND6×109 (2 cycles)
Kang and Zhang (2016)25Con Reg + DC–CIKGemcitabineNDNDND
Li (2016)26Con Reg + CIKGemcitabine + cisplatin + RTIntravenous infusionND>1×1010 (≥2 cycles)
Liu (2012)27Con Reg + DC–CIKNDIntravenous infusionIFN-γ, IL-2, CD3, GM-CSF, IL-46×109 (2 cycles)
Mu et al (2016)28Con Reg + DC–CIKGemcitabine + nab-paclitaxelIntravenous infusionNDND (4 cycles)
Shen et al (2015)29Con Reg + CIKGemcitabineIntravenous infusionIFN-γ, IL-2, CD3ND
Wang (2015)30Con Reg + CIKGemcitabineIntravenous infusionNDND (2 cycles)
Wang et al (2013)16Con Reg + CIKS-1Intravenous infusionIFN-γ, IL-1α, IL-2, CD3ND (≥1 cycle)
Wang et al (2016)17Con Reg + CIK(gemcitabine + S-1)/otherIntravenous infusionIFN-γ, IL-2, CD35×109 (2 cycles)
Wen et al (2013)31Con Reg + DC–CIKMitomycin + adriamycin + FuIntravenous infusionNDND
Zhang et al (2013)32Con Reg + CIKGemcitabineIntravenous infusionNDND
Zhang (2014)33Con Reg + DC–CIKGemcitabine + oxaliplatin +5-FuIntravenous infusionGM-CSF, IL-4ND
Zhang et al (2016)34Con Reg + DC–CIKGemcitabine + oxaliplatin +5-FuIntravenous infusionND>1×109 (ND)
Zheng et al (2016)35Con Reg + DC–CIKGemcitabine + oxaliplatin +5-FuIntravenous infusionND6×109 (2 cycles)

Notes: Con, control group (chemotherapy alone group); exp, experimental group (chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy); RT, three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy.

Abbreviations: Con Reg, control group regimen; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; ND, not determined; 5-Fu, 5-fluorouracil; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor.

Quality assessment

Bias risk assessment is shown in Figure 2. Seven studies were determined as low risk, four researches were not truly randomized controlled trials, and the remaining three studies lacked clear description of randomization process. Risks of allocation, performance, and detection were low. Two studies absent of follow-up, seven trials with selective reporting were regarded as an unclear risk, and other two studies were considered as high risk for lacking primary outcome data.
Figure 2

Risk of bias summary: review of authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item for included studies.

Note: Each color represents a different level of bias: red for high-risk, green for low-risk, and yellow for unclear-risk of bias.

Efficacy assessments

In our pooled analysis, patients treated by combined therapy showed higher PR (Figure S1A, OR =1.49, 95% CI =1.06–2.10, P=0.02), ORR (Figure 3A, OR =1.69, 95% CI =1.20–2.38, P=0.003), and DCR (Figure 3B, OR =2.33, 95% CI =1.63–3.33, P<0.00001) and lower PD rates (Figure S1B, OR =0.43, 95% CI =0.30–0.61, P<0.00001) with statistical significance, whereas CR and SD did not show obvious difference from chemo-alone group (Figure S1C and D, CR: OR =1.97, 95% CI =0.85–4.54, P=0.11; SD: OR =1.31, 95% CI =0.95–1.80, P=0.10). Fixed-effect models were used in this analysis because of low heterogeneity (Table 3).
Figure 3

Forest plots of the comparison of ORR (A) and DCR (B) between the experimental and control groups.

Notes: Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The fixed-effects meta-analysis model (M–H method) was used.

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; DCR, disease control rate; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel; ORR, overall response rate.

Table 3

Comparison of CR, PR, SD, PD, ORR, and DCR between the experimental and control groups

ParameterNumber of patients (n)
Analysis methodHeterogeneity
OR95% CIP-value
Experimental groupControl groupI2 (%)P-value
CR328390Fixed00.841.970.85–4.540.11
PR328390Fixed00.961.491.06–2.100.02
SD328390Fixed350.141.310.95–1.800.10
PD328390Fixed00.740.430.30–0.61<0.00001
ORR328390Fixed00.961.691.20–2.380.003
DCR328390Fixed00.702.331.63–3.33<0.00001

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CR, complete response; DCR, disease control rate; OR, odds ratio; ORR, overall response rate; PR, partial response; PD, progressive disease; SD, stable disease.

Prognosis evaluation

In the 14 studies, patients treated by combined therapy had higher OS than those treated by chemotherapy alone (Figure 4, 1-year OS: OR =3.61, 95% CI =2.41–5.40, P<0.00001; 3-year OS: OR =2.65, 95% CI =1.56–4.50, P=0.0003). Considering slightly significant heterogeneity, fixed-effects model were applied in this analysis. Compared to control group, patients in experimental group showed significantly improved QoL (Figure 5A, OR =3.04, CI =1.58–5.88, P=0.0009) and Karnofsky Performance Score (Kps) (Figure 5B, OR =9.06, 95% CI =7.27–10.84, P<0.00001), which also indicates the performance status of patients.
Figure 4

Forest plot of the comparison of OS between the experimental and control groups.

Notes: Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The fixed-effects meta-analysis model (M–H method) was used.

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel; OS, overall survival.

Figure 5

Forest plots of the comparison of QoL between the experimental and control groups.

Notes: (A) QoL improvement; (B) Kps. Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The fixed-effects meta-analysis model was used.

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; Kps, Karnofsky Performance Score; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel; QoL, quality of life.

Immune function evaluation

The immune status of patients was examined before and after treatment. As shown in Figure 6, after DC–CIK treatment, percentages of CD3+, CD4+, and CD3+CD56+ were increased (CD3+: OR =10.70, 95% CI =7.38–14.03, P<0.00001; CD4+: OR =7.62, 95% CI =1.56–13.67, P=0.01; CD3+CD56+: OR =7.34, 95% CI =6.77–7.92, P<0.00001), and percentage of CD4+CD25+CD127low was decreased (OR =−3.52, 95% CI =−4.61 to −2.44, P<0.00001); the changes were statistically significant, whereas proportions of CD8+ and CD4+/CD8+ ratio were not apparently changed (CD8+: OR =−5.01, 95% CI =−23.14 to 13.12, P=0.59; CD4+/CD8+ ratio: OR =0.13, 95% CI =−0.42 to 0.68, P=0.64). In contrast, IFN-γ level was increased distinctly after DC–CIK immunotherapy (IFN-γ: OR =2.28, 95% CI =1.33 to 3.22, P<0.00001), while IL-4 level was dramatically decreased (OR =−1.85, 95% CI =−2.69 to −1.01, P<0.0001) (Figure 7).
Figure 6

Forest plot of the comparison of immunophenotype in pre- and posttherapies.

Note: The random effects meta-analysis model (IV method) was used.

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; IV, inverse variance.

Figure 7

Forest plot of the comparison of IFN-γ and IL-4 in pre- and posttherapies.

Note: The fixed-effects meta-analysis model (IV method) was used.

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; IV, inverse variance; IFN-γ, interferon-γ; IL-4, interleukin-4.

Adverse events’ assessment

In the involved clinical trials, no serious adverse events or death occurrence was reported in patients receiving DC–CIK immunotherapy. As shown in Figures S2 and 3 and Table 4, no significant difference was found on adverse events including fever, skin rash, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, diarrhea, nausea and vomiting, gastrointestinal adverse reaction (AE), fatigue, neutropenia, and myelosuppression between the experimental and control groups (fever: OR =2.39, 95% CI =0.70–8.23, P=0.17 [Figure S3A, fever I + II: OR =4.34, 95% CI =1.35–13.89, P=0.01; fever III + IV: OR =3.11, 95% CI =0.12–79.87, P=0.49]; skin rash: OR =1.32, 95% CI =0.54–3.19, P=0.54 [Figure S3B, skin rash I + II: OR =2.21, 95% CI =0.52–9.36, P=0.28; skin rash III + IV: OR =3.33, 95% CI =0.13–85.11, P=0.47]; leukopenia: OR =0.56, 95% CI =0.22–1.47, P=0.24 [Figure S3C, leukopenia I + II: OR =0.86, 95% CI =0.36–2.06, P=0.73; leukopenia III + IV: OR =0.32, 95% CI =0.06–1.64, P=0.17]; thrombocytopenia: OR =0.54, 95% CI =0.18–1.64, P=0.27 [Figure S3D, thrombocytopenia I + II: OR =0.61, 95% CI =0.22–1.73, P=0.36; thrombocytopenia III + IV: OR =0.32, 95% CI =0.01–8.24, P=0.49]; diarrhea: OR =1.52, 95% CI =0.57–4.03, P=0.40 [Figure S3E, diarrhea I + II: OR =1.58, 95% CI =0.58–4.32, P=0.37; diarrhea III + IV: OR =1.08, 95% CI =0.14–8.21, P=0.94]; nausea and vomiting: OR =0.83, 95% CI =0.30–2.28, P=0.72 [Figure S3F, nausea and vomiting I + II: OR =0.95, 95% CI =0.35–2.60, P=0.92; nausea and vomiting III + IV: OR =0.35, 95% CI =0.01–8.83, P=0.52]; gastrointestinal AE: OR =0.65, 95% CI =0.23–1.90, P=0.43; fatigue: OR =0.66, 95% CI =0.08–5.80, P=0.71; neutropenia: OR =1.09, 95% CI =0.28–4.25, P=0.90; and myelosuppression: OR =0.48, 95% CI =0.19–1.26, P=0.14).
Table 4

Comparison of adverse events between the experimental and control groups

Adverse eventsNumber of patients (n)
Analysis methodHeterogeneity
OR95% CIP-value
Experimental groupControl groupI2 (%)P-value
Fever170204Random670.032.390.70–8.230.17
 Fever I + II5557Random570.134.341.35–13.890.01
 Fever III + IV5557Random3.110.12–79.870.49
Skin rash145147Random00.461.320.54–3.190.54
 Skin rash I + II5557Random00.662.210.52–9.360.28
 Skin rash III + IV5557Random3.330.13–85.110.47
Leukopenia5557Random00.330.560.22–1.470.24
 Leukopenia I + II5557Random00.920.860.36–2.060.73
 Leukopenia III + IV5557Random00.620.320.06–1.640.17
Thrombocytopenia5557Random00.380.540.18–1.640.27
 Thrombocytopenia I + II5557Random00.700.610.22–1.730.36
 Thrombocytopenia III + IV5557Random0.320.01–8.240.49
Diarrhea5557Random00.481.520.57–4.030.40
 Diarrhea I + II5557Random00.491.580.58–4.320.37
 Diarrhea III + IV5557Random1.080.14–8.210.94
Nausea, vomiting5557Random00.420.830.30–2.280.72
 Nausea, vomiting I + II5557Random00.490.950.35–2.600.92
 Nausea, vomiting III + IV5557Random0.350.01–8.830.52
Gastrointestinal AE5284Random00.320.650.23–1.900.43
Fatigue5387Random720.060.660.08–5.800.71
Neutropenia2830Random1.090.28–4.250.90
Myelosuppression2557Random0.480.19–1.260.14

Abbreviations: AE, adverse reaction; CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio.

Sensitivity analysis

PC patients were treated by DC–CIK immunotherapy in eight trials24,25,27,28,31,33–35 and by CIK alone in the other six trials.16,17,26,29,30,32 Studies were grouped according to different immunotherapy strategies (CIK or DC–CIK), and pooled results were compared (Table 5). The comparison showed both CIK and DC–CIK were effective in treating PC, and no obvious difference between these two methods was observed in most pooled analyses including ORR (Figure S4A), DCR (Figure S4B), and 1-year OS (Figure S5).
Table 5

Meta-analysis of 1-year OS, ORR, and DCR in CIK and DC–CIK subgroups

Immunotherapy type (subgroup)ParametersNumber of patients (n)
Analysis methodHeterogeneity
OR95% CIP-value
Experimental groupControl groupI2 (%)P-value
CIKORR186248Fixed00.961.801.12–2.900.01
DCR186248Fixed00.442.251.47–3.440.0002
1-Year OS5284Random860.0073.580.41–30.950.25
DC–CIKORR142142Fixed00.501.570.95–2.580.08
DCR142142Fixed00.732.531.32–4.850.005
1-Year OS190190Random00.953.622.25–5.84<0.00001

Abbreviations: DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; DCR, disease control rate; OR, odds ratio; ORR, overall response rate; OS, overall survival.

Publication bias

Funnel plots drawn for the studies on primary outcomes (1- and 3-year OS, ORR, and DCR) were symmetrical approximately, which indicated generally controlled publication bias and reliability of our primary conclusions (Figure 8A, 1-year OS; Figure 8B, 3-year OS; Figure 8C, ORR; Figure 8D, DCR).
Figure 8

Funnel plot of each meta-analysis.

Notes: 1-Year OS (A); 3-year OS (B); ORR (C); and DCR (D).

Abbreviations: DCR, disease control rate; ORR, overall response rate; OS, overall survival; SE, standard error; OR, odds ratio.

Discussion

In recent years, immunotherapy using DC–CIK was found effective in PC treatment.16–18 Even though there was statistical analysis of published clinical trials, the exact therapeutic effects were not systematically evaluated and demonstrated because of sample sizes’ variability among these trials. In addition, the different applied protocols in different clinical trials may lead to different clinical response. In this research, we performed an extensive online search followed by rigorous contrasting and combining data analysis in categorization, by which to provide clear and systematical conclusion. Our analysis showed that DC–CIK immunotherapy enhanced the curative effect of chemotherapy for PC, which was supported by markedly increased ORR (P=0.0003) and DCR (P<0.00001) in PC patients treated by combined therapy. With the addition of DC–CIK immunotherapy, prognosis of PC patients was also improved, according to the significantly prolonged survival time (1-year OS, P<0.00001; 3-year OS, P<0.00001) and QoL (P=0.0009). Previous study has reported the immunosuppressed status in cancer patient, and several researchers found that adjuvant immunotherapy of DC–CIK was able to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy for various malignant tumors by reconstructing cancer patient’s immune function.5,6 Our analysis showed that DC–CIK treatment can significantly improve the percentages of CD3+, CD4+, and CD3+CD56+ T cells in PC patients. Moreover, CD4+CD25+CD127low regulatory T cells negatively regulate the antitumor activity of DC–CIK immune cells36 and our analysis showed result that CD4+CD25+CD127low regulatory T-cell subset proportion decreased after DC–CIK immunotherapy. These results indicated that immune function of chemotherapy-treated PC patients was improved after DC–CIK immunotherapy. However, no significant difference was found in CD8+ T cells’ proportion and CD4+/CD8+ ratio between with and without immunotherapy, which may be caused by various choices of treatment opportunity and DC–CIK transfusion dosages in different clinical trials.6 The balance between Th1 and Th2 cells is crucial in immunotherapy.5 Our analysis showed that after DC–CIK immunotherapy, IFN-γ (Th1 cytokine) level in PC patients was significantly increased, whereas IL-4 (Th2 cytokine) level was obviously decreased, indicating a passably more important role of IFN-γ and IL-4 during the DC–CIK immunotherapy. Safety is a crucial criterion for the popularization of clinical application of DC–CIK immunotherapy. Based on published literature up to May 2017, our meta-analysis shows that DC–CIK immunotherapy is a safe therapeutic strategy for PC, as no significant difference in adverse events was observed between with and without immunotherapy. Most side effects of DC–CIK immunotherapy were well tolerated by PC patients, and no serious adverse events or death occurred during DC–CIK therapy. In this analysis, PC patients were treated by DC–CIK immunotherapy in eight trials and CIK alone in the other six trials. To provide evidence for making the choice of using CIK or DC–CIK, difference between their therapeutic effects was evaluated by sensitivity analysis, which showed that both CIK and DC–CIK were effective in treating PC without statistical difference. These results are inconsistent with in vitro study in which DC–CIK represented higher antitumor activity than CIK alone and need to be further explored. Moreover, we conducted publication bias to verify the reliability of our result and no obvious bias exists in our primary conclusions.

Limitations

A total of 14 included trials, which met our selection criteria, turned out to be conducted on Chinese population. One trial conducted in Korea was included in our research originally but was then excluded because it lacked insufficient data. Besides, data analyzed in this research were collected from published papers rather than original patient records, which may lead to overestimation of curative effects.

Conclusion

Our meta-analysis shows that the combination of DC–CIK immunotherapy and chemotherapy is a promising immune treatment for PC patients. It markedly prolongs PC patients’ survival time passably by reconstructing patients’ immune function. Forest plots of the comparison of PR (A), PD (B), CR (C), and SD (D) rates between the experimental and control groups. Notes: Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The fixed-effects meta-analysis model (M–H method) was used. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CR, complete response; CIK, cytokine-induced killer; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–CIK; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel; PD, progressive disease; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease. Forest plot of the comparison of adverse effects between the experimental and control groups. Notes: Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The random effects meta-analysis model (M–H method) was used. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel. Forest plots of the comparison of all-grade adverse effects including fever (A), skin rash (B), leukopenia (C), thrombocytopenia (D), diarrhea (E), and nausea and vomiting (F). Notes: Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The fixed-effects meta-analysis model (M–H method) was used. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–cytokine-induced killer; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel. Forest plots of the comparison of ORR (A) and DCR (B) in CIK and DC–CIK subgroups. Notes: Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The fixed-effects meta-analysis model (M–H method) was used. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CIK, cytokine-induced killer; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–CIK; DCR, disease control rate; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel; ORR, overall response rate. Forest plot of the comparison of 1-year OS in CIK and DC–CIK subgroups. Notes: Control group, chemotherapy alone group; experimental group, chemotherapy with DC–CIK immunotherapy. The random effects meta-analysis model (M–H method) was used. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CIK, cytokine-induced killer; DC–CIK, dendritic cells–CIK; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel; OS, overall survival.
  24 in total

Review 1.  Primary analysis for clinical efficacy of immunotherapy in patients with pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Linghua Chen; Xiaoyan Zhang
Journal:  Immunotherapy       Date:  2015-11-13       Impact factor: 4.196

2.  Comparative study of different procedures for the separation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in cytokine-induced killer cell immunotherapy for hepatocarcinoma.

Authors:  Hui Liu; Jianyu Li; Fengmei Wang; Yingtang Gao; Ying Luo; Peng Wang; Chenglong Li; Zhengyan Zhu
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2014-11-24

Review 3.  Immunotherapy in pancreatic cancer treatment: a new frontier.

Authors:  Komal Thind; Leslie J Padrnos; Ramesh K Ramanathan; Mitesh J Borad
Journal:  Therap Adv Gastroenterol       Date:  2016-10-17       Impact factor: 4.409

4.  Adoptive cellular immunotherapy for the treatment of patients with breast cancer: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Zheng-Xu Wang; Jun-Xia Cao; Min Wang; Duo Li; Yu-Xin Cui; Xiao-Yan Zhang; Jin-Long Liu; Jun-Li Li
Journal:  Cytotherapy       Date:  2014-05-01       Impact factor: 5.414

5.  Phase II clinical trial of ex vivo-expanded cytokine-induced killer cells therapy in advanced pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Moon Jae Chung; Jeong Youp Park; Seungmin Bang; Seung Woo Park; Si Young Song
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2014-06-12       Impact factor: 6.968

6.  Postoperative immunosuppression cascade and immunotherapy using lymphokine-activated killer cells for patients with esophageal cancer: possible application for compensatory anti-inflammatory response syndrome.

Authors:  Yoshiyuki Yamaguchi; Jun Hihara; Katsuji Hironaka; Akiko Ohshita; Riki Okita; Makoto Okawaki; Kazuo Matsuura; Ichiro Nagamine; Takuhiro Ikeda; Masahiro Ohara; Yoichi Hamai
Journal:  Oncol Rep       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 3.906

Review 7.  Effectiveness and safety of chemotherapy combined with dendritic cells co-cultured with cytokine-induced killer cells in the treatment of advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Rui-xian Han; Xu Liu; Pan Pan; Ying-jie Jia; Jian-chun Yu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-09-30       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Cytokine-induced killer cells/dendritic cells-cytokine induced killer cells immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy for treatment of colorectal cancer in China: a meta-analysis of 29 trials involving 2,610 patients.

Authors:  Lei Zhang; Ying Mu; Anqi Zhang; Jiaping Xie; Shuangfeng Chen; Fang Xu; Weihua Wang; Yingxin Zhang; Shaoda Ren; Changhui Zhou
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-07-11

9.  Cytokine-induced killer cells/dendritic cells and cytokine-induced killer cells immunotherapy for the treatment of esophageal cancer in China: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Yan Liu; Ying Mu; Anqi Zhang; Shaoda Ren; Weihua Wang; Jiaping Xie; Yingxin Zhang; Changhui Zhou
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2017-03-29       Impact factor: 4.147

10.  Efficacy of cytokine-induced killer cells in the treatment of elderly patients with metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Wei Li; Yaomei Wang; Daniel B Kellner; Linping Xu; Ling Mai
Journal:  Cent Eur J Immunol       Date:  2015-08-03       Impact factor: 2.085

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Review 1.  Advances in Human Dendritic Cell-Based Immunotherapy Against Gastrointestinal Cancer.

Authors:  Ling Ni
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-05-10       Impact factor: 8.786

2.  Advanced pancreatic cancer: The standard of care and new opportunities.

Authors:  Amrallah A Mohammad
Journal:  Oncol Rev       Date:  2018-09-14

Review 3.  Conceptual Development of Immunotherapeutic Approaches to Gastrointestinal Cancer.

Authors:  Bilikis Aderonke Abolarinwa; Ridwan Babatunde Ibrahim; Yen-Hua Huang
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2019-09-18       Impact factor: 5.923

  3 in total

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