| Literature DB >> 28884088 |
Daniel F Pease1, Robert A Kratzke1.
Abstract
The limited effectiveness of conventional therapy for malignant pleural mesothelioma demands innovative approaches to this difficult disease. Even with aggressive multimodality treatment of surgery, radiation, and/or chemotherapy, the median survival is only 1-2 years depending on stage and histology. Oncolytic viral therapy has emerged in the last several decades as a rapidly advancing field of immunotherapy studied in a wide spectrum of malignancies. Mesothelioma makes an ideal candidate for studying oncolysis given the frequently localized pattern of growth and pleural location providing access to direct intratumoral injection of virus. Therefore, despite being a relatively uncommon disease, the multitude of viral studies for mesothelioma can provide insight for applying such therapy to other malignancies. This article will begin with a review of the general principles of oncolytic therapy focusing on antitumor efficacy, tumor selectivity, and immune system activation. The second half of this review will detail results of preclinical models and human studies for oncolytic virotherapy in mesothelioma.Entities:
Keywords: adenovirus; herpes simplex virus type 1; measles virus; mesothelioma; novel; oncolytic; vaccinia virus; virotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28884088 PMCID: PMC5573749 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2017.00179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1The basic principles of oncolytic virotherapy. (A) Administration is most commonly via direct intratumoral injection rather than systemic intravenous route to avoid viral inactivation in the bloodstream and minimize off-target infection. The pleural location of mesothelioma is particularly amenable to direct injection. (B) Viral infection of cancer cells, followed by replication, leads to cell lysis and dissemination of infection. The use of non-replicating viruses results in lysis to a lesser extent than replicating viruses. Acquired defects of the cancer cells and engineered modifications of the viral genome drive infection selectively toward cancer cells. (C) Viral infection and lysis exposes tumor-associated and viral antigens to the immune system. Antigen-presenting cells process these novel antigens via the major histocompatibility complex for presentation to CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Cytokine release attracts NK cells. Local tumor cell death is augmented by the immune response. (D) Activated T and NK cells circulate throughout the body and recognize distant tumor cells that express the previously uncovered tumor-associated antigens. Note that the systemic immune response is not dependent on viral oncolysis.
Figure 2The selective infection of tumor cells by oncolytic viruses. In the normal cell, the response to viral infection involves activation of the type 1 interferon (IFN) and protein kinase R (PKR) pathways, resulting in upregulation of eIF2α and inhibition of viral protein synthesis. The p53 and Rb pathways are also activated. Wild-type viruses are able to inhibit various steps of the antiviral response to allow ongoing replication. For example, the herpes simplex virus (HSV) gene ICP34.5 blocks PKR signaling, and the adenovirus genes E1A and E1B inactivate Rb and p53, respectively. The tumor cell may have a number of acquired defects that allow for preferential infection by oncolytic viruses. An increased expression of cell surface proteins facilitates viral entry, such as herpesvirus entry mediator for HSV type 1 (HSV-1) and CD46 for measles virus. Defective IFN and PKR pathways lead to unimpeded viral protein synthesis. Upregulation of RAS in tumor cells results in PKR pathway inhibition. Modification of viruses can further drive tropism and minimize infection of normal cells. Deletion of the HSV gene ICP34.5 renders the virus unable to inhibit PKR in healthy cells and drives infection toward PKR-deficient tumor cells. Similarly, deletion of the adenovirus E1A or E1B genes leads to preferential infection of p53- and Rb-deficient tumor cells.
Human clinical studies of virotherapy for malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM).
| Strain | Modification(s) | Study design | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ad.HSV | Insertion of thymidine kinase suicide gene | 21 patients in single-arm, dose-escalation study received single intrapleural dose followed by ganciclovir ( | Gene transfer documented in 11 patients, minimal toxicity, no tumor responses |
| 5 patients given high-dose vector in same method as above study, with addition of systemic steroids ( | Decreased inflammatory response but no improvement in gene transfer | ||
| Long-term follow-up of 21 patients who received high-dose vector ( | Good safety profile, two patients lived >6.5 years | ||
| Ad.IFNβ (replication incompetent) | Insertion of interferon (IFN)β gene | Phase I dose-escalation study, 7 patients given single intrapleural dose ( | Clinical response in three patients at 60 days, IFNβ detectable in fluid of eight patients |
| Follow-up phase I study, 10 patients given 2 intrapleural doses ( | Repeated dosing safe, response by CT scan at 60 days in two patients | ||
| Adenovirus expressing IFNα2b (replication incompetent) | Insertion of IFNα2b gene | Pilot and feasibility study with 9 patients given 2 intrapleural doses of vector ( | Five patients with stable disease or tumor regression at 60 days, gene transfer augmented by second dose |
| Phase II trial of two intrapleural doses of vector combined with chemotherapy in 40 patients ( | Partial response in 25%, stable disease in 62.5%, median survival 13 months, six patients lived >2 years | ||
| Ad5-D24-GM-CSF (replication competent) | Partial deletion of E1A, insertion of granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) gene | 20 patients with advanced solid tumors (2 with MPM) given 1 intratumoral dose ( | 47% overall clinical benefit rate, one MPM patient with stable disease |
| ONCOS-102 (Ad5/3-D24-GM-CSF) | Insertion of Ad3 fiber knob, partial deletion of E1A, insertion of GM-CSF | 12 patients with advanced solid tumors (2 with MPM) given multiple intratumoral injections combined with oral cyclophosphamide ( | Clinical response rate 40% at 3 months, one MPM patient with stable disease, increased PD-L1 in both MPM patients |
| Ad5/3-D24-GM-CSF | 21 patients with advanced tumors (1 with MPM) given one intratumoral and one IV dose, with oral cyclophosphamide ( | Evidence of efficacy in 13 of 21 patients, MPM patient with stable disease, no grade 4/5 adverse events | |
| HSV-1716 (replication competent) | Deletion of γ134.5 gene | Phase I/IIa study of inoperable MPM with single or multiple intrapleural doses ( | Pending, expected completion in 2016 (NCT01721018) |
| VV–IL-2 (replication competent) | Insertion of interleukin-2 gene, deletion of thymidine kinase gene | Small pilot study with six patients receiving multiple intratumoral injections ( | Well-tolerated, viral gene expression detected for up to 3 weeks after administration, no tumor responses |
| JX-594 (replication competent) | Deletion of thymidine kinase gene, insertion of GM-CSF gene | Phase I trial, 23 patients with metastatic solid tumors (1 MPM patient), given single IV dose ( | No dose-limiting toxicities, MPM patient with partial response for >10 weeks |
| Measles virus (MV)–NIS (replication competent) | Edmonston strain with insertion of NIS gene | Phase I trial enrolling patients with MPM confined to single pleural cavity, given q28 days for up to six cycles ( | Pending, currently enrolling patients (NCT01503177) |
| PV701 (replication competent) | Naturally attenuated, non-recombinant | Phase I trail of 79 patients with advanced solid malignancies (2 with mesothelioma), virus given intravenously at various doses and intervals ( | 9 patients with objective responses, 1 |
| Type 3 Dearing strain (replication competent) | Wild-type, non-recombinant | Phase 1 trial in 25 patients with advanced malignancy (1 MPM patient), given IV q3 weeks at escalating doses, combined with docetaxel ( | Disease control rate 88%, MPM patient with minor response |