| Literature DB >> 29179527 |
Wojciech K Panek1, J Robert Kane1, Jacob S Young2, Aida Rashidi1, Julius W Kim1, Deepak Kanojia1, Maciej S Lesniak1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma is a highly aggressive malignant brain tumor with a poor prognosis and the median survival 14.6 months. Immunomodulatory proteins and oncolytic viruses represent two treatment approaches that have recently been developed for patients with glioblastoma that could extend patient survival and result in better treatment outcomes for patients with this disease. Together, these approaches could potentially augment the treatment efficacy and strength of these anti-tumor therapies. In addition to oncolytic activities, this combinatory approach introduces immunomodulation locally only where cancerous cells are present. This thereby results in the change of the tumor microenvironment from immune-suppressive to immune-vulnerable via activation of cytotoxic T cells or through the removal of glioma cells immune-suppressive capability. This review discusses the strengths and weaknesses of adenoviral oncolytic therapy, and highlights the genetic modifications that result in more effective and targeted viral agents. Additionally, the mechanism of action of immune-activating agents is described and the results of previous clinical trials utilizing these treatments in other solid tumors are reviewed. The feasibility, synergy, and limitations for treatments that combine these two approaches are outlined and areas for which more work is needed are considered.Entities:
Keywords: checkpoint blockade; combinatory therapy; glioma; immunomodulator(s); oncolytic adenovirus
Year: 2017 PMID: 29179527 PMCID: PMC5687697 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.20810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1A schematic diagram of infectivity-enhanced fiber modifications and tumor-specific replication of adenovirus
Various viral modification approaches have been constructed to achieve efficient infection and cancer-specific replication. Among the various types of viral modification, the most common approaches for tropism modification (pk7, RGD, and 5/3) and tumor-restricted replication (tumor-specific promoter and delta24) are depicted.
Clinical trials of oncolytic adenovirus-based virotherapy in glioma
| Trial number | Type of treatment | Phase | Therapeutic agent | Additional Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00805376 | DNX2401 (Formerly Known as Delta-24-RGD-4C) + TMZ | Phase I | Ad.Delta-24-RGD-4C | Drug: DNX-2401 |
| Procedure: Tumor Removal | ||||
| * Completed | ||||
| NCT02197169 | DNX-2401 With Interferon Gamma (IFN-γ) for Recurrent Glioblastoma or Gliosarcoma Brain Tumors (TARGET-I) | Phase I | CRAd DNX-2401 (Formerly Named Delta-24-RGD) | Drug: Single intratumoral injection of DNX-2401 |
| Drug: Interferon-gamma | ||||
| * In the process of recruiting participants | ||||
| NCT03072134 | Neural Stem Cell Based Virotherapy of Newly Diagnosed Malignant Glioma | Phase I | Neural stem cells loaded with Ad5-pK7 | Biological: Neural stem cells loaded with Ad5-pK7 |
| * In the process of recruiting participants | ||||
| NCT02798406 | Combination Adenovirus + Pembrolizumab to Trigger Immune Virus Effects | Phase II | CRAd DNX-2401 | Biological: DNX-2401 and pembrolizumab |
| * In the process of recruiting participants | ||||
| NCT01301430 | Parvovirus H-1 (ParvOryx) in Patients With Progressive Primary or Recurrent Glioblastoma Multiforme | Phase I/II | Parvovirus H-1 | Drug: H-1PV |
| * Completed | ||||
| NCT01582516 | Trial of a Conditionally Replication-competent Adenovirus (Delta-24-rgd) Administered by Convection Enhanced Delivery in Patients With Recurrent Glioblastoma | Phase I/II | Ad.Delta-24-RGD | Biological: delta-24-RGD adenovirus |
| * Completed | ||||
| NCT01956734 | Virus DNX2401 and Temozolomide in Recurrent Glioblastoma (D24GBM) | Phase I | DNX-2401 (Formerly Named Delta-24-RGD) | Procedure: DNX2401 and Temozolomide |
| * Ongoing trial |
Figure 2Mechanism of combinatory therapies for the treatment of glioma: oncolytic virotherapy paired with immunotherapy
(A) Entry of oncolytic adenovirus into glioma cells (immunosuppressive microenvironment in yellow color). (B) Release of immunomodulator (IM) from oncolytic adenovirus infected glioma cells (a change of the tumor microenvironment from immunosuppressive to immunovulnerable via activation of cytotoxic T cells or removal of glioma cells’ immunosuppression capability affecting systemic immune repertoire). (C) Specific lysis of cancerous cells, induction of tumor specific antigens (TSA) release, and lastly, via the least known mechanism, impairment of tumor DNA repair system. (D) Eradication of the residual, immunovulnerable solid tumor mass by anti-cancer immune responses such as cytotoxic T cells.