| Literature DB >> 29123260 |
Jessica S Brown1, Raghav Sundar1,2, Juanita Lopez1,3.
Abstract
The idea that chemotherapy can be used in combination with immunotherapy may seem somewhat counterproductive, as it can theoretically eliminate the immune cells needed for antitumour immunity. However, much preclinical work has now demonstrated that in addition to direct cytotoxic effects on cancer cells, a proportion of DNA damaging agents may actually promote immunogenic cell death, alter the inflammatory milieu of the tumour microenvironment and/or stimulate neoantigen production, thereby activating an antitumour immune response. Some notable combinations have now moved forward into the clinic, showing promise in phase I-III trials, whereas others have proven toxic, and challenging to deliver. In this review, we discuss the emerging data of how DNA damaging agents can enhance the immunogenic properties of malignant cells, focussing especially on immunogenic cell death, and the expansion of neoantigen repertoires. We discuss how best to strategically combine DNA damaging therapeutics with immunotherapy, and the challenges of successfully delivering these combination regimens to patients. With an overwhelming number of chemotherapy/immunotherapy combination trials in process, clear hypothesis-driven trials are needed to refine the choice of combinations, and determine the timing and sequencing of agents in order to stimulate antitumour immunological memory and improve maintained durable response rates, with minimal toxicity.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29123260 PMCID: PMC5808021 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2017.376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Immune checkpoint inhibitors with a licence for use in cancer
| Ipilimumab | CTLA-4 | Melanoma | 2nd | NA | Mar 11 | May 11 | Dec 12 | PMID: 20525992 |
| 1st | NA | NA | Sep 13 | Jul 14 | PMID: 21639810 | |||
| Adjuvant | EORTC 18071 | Oct 15 | NA | NA | PMID: 27717298 | |||
| Nivolumab | PD-1 | Melanoma | 2nd | Checkmate 037 | Dec 14 | Apr 15 | Feb 16 | PMID: 25795410 |
| 1st | Checkmate 066 | NA | Apr 15 | Feb 16 | PMID: 25399552 | |||
| Squamous lung | 2nd | Checkmate 017 | Mar 15 | Sep 15 | NA | PMID: 26028407 | ||
| Nonsquamous lung | 2nd | Checkmate 057 | Oct 15 | Sep 15 | NA | PMID: 26412456 | ||
| RCC | 2nd | Checkmate 025 | Nov 15 | Feb 16 | Nov 16 | PMID: 26406148 | ||
| Hodgkin’s lymphoma | 3rd | NA | May 16 | Oct 16 | NA | PMID: 27451390 | ||
| Head and neck | 2nd | Checkmate 141 | Nov 10 | May 17 | NA | PMID: 27718784 | ||
| Urothelial | 2nd | Checkmate 275 | Feb 17 | Jun 17 | NA | PMID: 28131785 | ||
| Pembrolizumab | Lung | 2nd | Keynote 001 | Oct 15 | Jun 16 | Dec-16 | PMID: 25891174 | |
| 1st | Keynote 024 | Oct 16 | Dec 16 | NA | PMID: 27718847 | |||
| 1st +Carbo/Pem | Keynote 021 | May 17 | NA | NA | PMID: 27745820 | |||
| Melanoma | 2nd | Keynote 001 | Sep 14 | May 15 | Oct-15 | PMID: 25034862 | ||
| Head and neck | 2nd | Keynote 012 | Aug 16 | NA | NA | PMID: 27247226 | ||
| Hodgkin’s lymphoma | 2nd | Keynote 013 + 087 | Mar 17 | May 17 | NA | PMID: 28441111 | ||
| Urothelial | 1st (platinum ineligible) | Keynote 052 | May 17 | NA | NA | |||
| 2nd | Keynote 045 | May 17 | NA | NA | PMID: 28212060 | |||
| MSI-H/dMMR solid tumour | 2nd | NA | May 17 | NA | NA | |||
| Atezolizumab | PD-L1 | Urothelial | 2nd | NA | May 16 | Jul-17 | NA | PMID: 26952546 |
| 1st (platinum ineligible) | IMvigor210 | Apr 17 | Jul 17 | NA | ||||
| Lung | 2nd | OAK | Oct 16 | Jul 17 | NA | PMID: 27979383 | ||
| Durvalumab | Urothelial | 2nd | Study 1108 | May 17 | NA | NA | PMID: 27269937 | |
Abbreviations: CTLA-4=cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4; dMMR=mismatch repair deficient; EMA=European Medicines Agency; FDA=Food and Drug Administration; MSI-H=microsatellite instability high; NA=not available; NICE=National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; PD-1=programmed cell death-1; PD-L1=programmed cell death ligand-1; RCC=renal cell carcinoma.
Figure 1Mechanisms by which DNA damaging agents affect the immunogenicity of tumours. See text for details.
Ongoing combination trials with DDR and immune checkpoint inhibitors (www.clinicaltrials.gov)
| Durvalumab | Breast | 3rd line | Olaparib | 1/2 | Olaparib + Durvalumab | 133 | Recruiting | NCT02734004 | |
| Gastric | 2nd line | ||||||||
| Ovarian | Platinum sensitive | ||||||||
| SCLC | 2nd line | ||||||||
| NSCLC/ SCLC | 2nd or higher line | Olaparib | 1/2 | Durvalumab + Olaparib | 338 | Recruiting | NCT02484404 | ||
| Breast | TNBC, < 3 prior lines | Durvalumab + Cediranib | |||||||
| Ovarian | Platinum resistant | Durvalumab + Olaparib + Cediranib | |||||||
| Colorectal | 3rd line | ||||||||
| Prostate | mCRPC | ||||||||
| Ovary | gBRCA | Olaparib | 1/2 | Olaparib + Durvalumab + Tremelimumab | 39 | Not yet recruiting | NCT02953457 | ||
| NSCLC | Refractory | AZD6738 | 1 | AZD6738 + Durvalumab | 114 | Recruiting | NCT02264678 | Has other arms involving AZD 6738 with other agents | |
| HNSCC | |||||||||
| Tremelimumab | Ovarian | 2nd line + | Olaparib | 1/2 | Tremelimumab + Olaparib | 50 | Recruiting | NCT02571725 | gBRCA only |
| Pembrolizumab | Breast | Up to 3 prior lines | Niraparib | 1/2 | niraparib + pembrolizumab | 114 | Recruiting | NCT02657889 | TNBC only |
| Ovarian | Up to 4 prior lines | Platinum resistant/refractory only | |||||||
| Nivolumab | NSCLC | 1st line metastatic | Carboplatin + paclitaxel or pemetrexed + Veliparib | 2 | Veliparib + nivolumab + platinum doublet chemotherapy | 184 | Recruiting | NCT02944396 | NA |
| Veliparib + platinum doublet chemotherapy | |||||||||
| Adv solid tumours | Refractory to std therapy | Veliparib | 1 | Veliparib + Nivolumab | 50 | Not yet recruiting | NCT03061188 | ||
| Atezolizumab | Breast | Any prior therapy allowed | Veliparib | 2 | Veliparib | 90 | Recruiting | NCT02849496 | TNBC + gBRCA only |
| Atezolizumab | |||||||||
| veliparib + atezolizumab | |||||||||
| BGB-A317 | Adv solid tumours | 2nd line + | BGB-290 | 1 | BGB-A317 + BGB-290 | 124 | Recruiting | NCT02660034 |
Abbreviations: DDR=DNA damage response; gBRCA=germline BRCA; HNSCC=head and neck squamous cell cancer; ICI=immune checkpoint inhibitor; mCRPC=metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer; NA=not available; NSCLC=non-small-cell lung cancer; SCLC=small-cell lung cancer; TNBC=triple-negative breast cancer.
Figure 2Combination strategies for DNA damaging therapeutics and immunotherapy. (A) Chemotherapy combination trials with current PD-1 and PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors as registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov. AML=acute myeloid leukaemia; DD agent=DNA damaging agent; HNSCC=head and neck squamous cell cancer; NHL=non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma; NSCLC=non-small-cell lung cancer; SCLC=small-cell lung cancer. (B) Proposed biomarker-driven approach to chemotherapy/immunotherapy combination trials. Multiple biomarkers that incorporate profiling of the tumour, patient and host immune response combined to determine tumour immune phenotype (Blank ; Hegde ). Inflamed tumours might demonstrate high levels of effector T cells (green), APCs (orange) and MDSCs (purple), with low PD-L1 expression and may respond to immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) monotherapy, requiring combination treatment with DNA damaging (DD) agents on progression only. Compare with the reverse in immune desert tumours that may require priming with DD agents followed by concurrent treatment with an ICI.