| Literature DB >> 29250200 |
Teresa Magnes1,2,3, Alexander Egle1,2,3, Richard Greil1,2,3, Thomas Melchardt1,2,3.
Abstract
At the annual ASCO meeting clinically relevant data concerning the management of advanced head and neck cancer that will influence clinical practice in the future were presented. Chemoradiation with high-dose cisplatin remains the mainstay of treatment for patients with locally advanced squamous cell head and neck cancer. Adjuvant therapy with afatinib following chemoradiation failed to show clinical benefit. The combination of bevacizumab with platinum-based chemotherapy improved progression-free survival but did not lead to a significant difference in overall survival compared to chemotherapy alone. However, the addition of immunotherapy may improve multimodal treatment concepts in locally advanced disease and new treatment combinations might overcome resistance to checkpoint inhibition.Entities:
Keywords: Afatinib; Cisplatin; Epacadostat; IDO1; Immunotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 29250200 PMCID: PMC5725515 DOI: 10.1007/s12254-017-0358-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Memo
Fig. 1Epacadostat as an oral inhibitor of IDO1 may overcome the resistance to immunotherapy in advanced head and neck cancer. IDO1 enzyme induces an immunosuppressive state by increasing kynurenine and reducing tryoptophan levels. PD-1 inhibition increases IDO1 expression in tumor cells and both PD-L1 and IDO1 are regulated by interferon gamma. Teff T effector cell, Treg T regulatory cell, mTOR mechanistic target of rapamycin, GCN general control nonderepressible, PD-1 programmed cell death protein 1, PD-L1 programmed cell death protein ligand 1, IFNγ interferon gamma, IFNγR interferon gamma receptor, IDO indoleamine deoxygenase, MHC major histocompatibility complex, AHR aryl hydrocarbon receptor. (Adapted from [15])