| Literature DB >> 29329556 |
Julian A Marin-Acevedo1, Aixa E Soyano2, Bhagirathbhai Dholaria2,3, Keith L Knutson4, Yanyan Lou5.
Abstract
Malignant cells have the capacity to rapidly grow exponentially and spread in part by suppressing, evading, and exploiting the host immune system. Immunotherapy is a form of oncologic treatment directed towards enhancing the host immune system against cancer. In recent years, manipulation of immune checkpoints or pathways has emerged as an important and effective form of immunotherapy. Agents that target cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated molecule-4 (CTLA-4), programmed cell death receptor-1 (PD-1), and programmed cell death ligand-1 (PD-L1) are the most widely studied and recognized. Immunotherapy, however, extends beyond immune checkpoint therapy by using new molecules such as chimeric monoclonal antibodies and antibody drug conjugates that target malignant cells and promote their destruction. Genetically modified T cells expressing chimeric antigen receptors are able to recognize specific antigens on cancer cells and subsequently activate the immune system. Native or genetically modified viruses with oncolytic activity are of great interest as, besides destroying malignant cells, they can increase anti-tumor activity in response to the release of new antigens and danger signals as a result of infection and tumor cell lysis. Vaccines are also being explored, either in the form of autologous or allogenic tumor peptide antigens, genetically modified dendritic cells that express tumor peptides, or even in the use of RNA, DNA, bacteria, or virus as vectors of specific tumor markers. Most of these agents are yet under development, but they promise to be important options to boost the host immune system to control and eliminate malignancy. In this review, we have provided detailed discussion of different forms of immunotherapy agents other than checkpoint-modifying drugs. The specific focus of this manuscript is to include first-in-human phase I and phase I/II clinical trials intended to allow the identification of those drugs that most likely will continue to develop and possibly join the immunotherapeutic arsenal in a near future.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody drug conjugates; Chimeric antigen receptor therapy; Immunotherapy; Oncolytic viruses; Tumor vaccines; Tumor-directed monoclonal antibodies; Viral gene therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29329556 PMCID: PMC5767051 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-017-0552-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Multi-modality cancer immunotherapy approaches
Summary of non-immune checkpoint blockade agents
| Category | Drug | Target | Trial | Phase | Type of tumor | Clinical efficacy | Safety | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor-directed monoclonal antibodies | ||||||||
| Ensituximab | MUC5A |
| I/II | CRC and pancreatic | OS improved from 5.0 to 6.8 months, 21/56 pts survived > 12 months | < 2% of patients with grade 3 toxicities and no grade 4 adverse events | Trial completed | |
| CEA CD3 TCB (RG7802, RO6958688) | CEA and CD3 |
| I | CEA(+) solid tumors | 5% PR | 16% patients developed grade 3 or more adverse events | In conjunction with obinutuzumab | |
|
| I | CEA(+) solid tumors | 20% PR | In conjunction with atezolizumab | ||||
| Blinatumomab | CD19 and CD3 |
| II | DLBCL | 19% CR, PFS up to 20 months | Grade 3 neurologic events (9% encephalopathy, 9% aphasia) | Trial completed | |
| BAY2010112 (AMG212, MT112) | PSMA and CD3 |
| I | Castration-resistant prostate cancer | Not reported | – | Study is ongoing but not recruiting | |
| MOR209/ES414 | PSMA and CD3 |
| I | – | ||||
| AFM13 | CD30 and CD16A |
| I | CD30+ HL | 3/26 PR, 13/26 SD, overall DCR 61.5% | Mild to moderate adverse events ranging from fever to infusion reactions | Trial completed | |
|
| II | CD30+ HL | – | – | – | |||
| Antibody drug conjugates | ||||||||
| ABBV-339 | c-Met |
| I | NSCLC | 19% PR | All-grade adverse events in > 10% of patients | Used in conjunction with erlotinib | |
| Glembatumumab vedotin (GV, CDX-011) | gpNMB |
| II | Melanoma | 1/62 CR, 6/62 PR, and 33/62 SD | Alopecia, neuropathy, rash, fatigue and neutropenia | – | |
| Losatuxizumab vedotin (ABBV-221) | EGFR |
| I | EGFR-dependent tumors | 38% SD and 1 patient had unconfirmed PR | Infusion reactions and fatigue | – | |
| Mirvetuximab soravtansine (IMGN853) | Folate receptor alpha (FRα) | I | Ovarian cancer | ORR 46% | 1/37 CR and 16/37 PR | Monotherapy | ||
| I | Ovarian cancer | – | Most adverse events were grade 2 or less | Used in combination with bevacizumab, carboplatin, liposomal doxorubicin, or pembrolizumab | ||||
| Enfortumab vedotin (ASG-22CE; ASG-22ME) | Nectin-4 |
| I | Urothelial tumors | ORR 40%, CR 3/68, median duration of response was 18 weeks, and median PFS 17 weeks | 85% developed adverse events, but most were grade 2 or less | – | |
| Sacituzumab govitecan (IMMU-132) | Trop-2 |
| I/II | Epithelial cell tumors | 30% ORR, 2/69 CR, 19/69 PR, median OS 16.6 months for triple negative breast cancer | Neutropenia, diarrhea, febrile neutropenia | – | |
| ORR 19%, median | ||||||||
| PFS 5.2 months, and a median OS of 9.5 months in NSCLC | ||||||||
| Inotuzumab ozogamicin (InO/CMC-544) | CD22 |
| I | CD22+ NHL | ORR 53% | 85% thrombocytopenia, 69% of neutropenia | Used in conjunction with rituximab, gemcitabine, dexamethasone, and cisplatin | |
| Labetuzumab govitecan (IMMU-130) | CEACAM |
| II | CRC | 1/86 PR, 42/86 had SD, OS was 6.9 months, and PFS was 3.6 months | 16% Neutropenia), 9% anemia, and 7% diarrhea | – | |
| Lorvotuzumab mertansine (IMGN901) | CD56 |
| I/II | SCLC | 94 patients (combination ADC with chemotherapy) and 47 patients (no ADC) achieved a PFS of 6.2 and 6.7 months, respectively | 29% Peripheral neuropathy , 21/94 patients had a treatment-emergent adverse event leading to death | Used in combination with carboplatin and etoposide | |
| Rovalpituzumab tesirine (Rova-T) | DLL3 |
| II | SCLC | 18% ORR, and 54% SD | 38% developed serious adverse events (pleural and pericardial effusions) | Ongoing | |
|
| I | SCLC | – | – | Used in combination with nivolumab or nivolumab and ipilimumab | |||
| ADCT-301 | CD25 |
| I | HL and NHL | 1/18 CR, 1/18 | Rash, mucositis, enteritis, and elevated CPK | - | |
| PR, 6/18 SD | ||||||||
|
| I | AML and ALL | – | – | – | |||
| TAK-264 (MLN0264) | GCC |
| II | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | 3% ORR | All patients developed at least 1 adverse event | Trial was terminated | |
| MEDI-4276 | HER2 |
| I/II | HER2+ solid tumors | – | – | – | |
| XMT-1522 | HER2 |
| I | HER2+ breast cancer | – | – | – | |
| ARX-788 | HER2 |
| I | HER2+ c1ancers | – | – | – | |
| DS-8201a | HER2 |
| I | Solid tumors | – | – | – | |
| SDY985 | HER2 |
| I | Solid tumors | – | – | – | |
| ADCT-502 | HER2 |
| I | HER2+ solid tumors | – | – | – | |
| Glembatumumab vedotin (CDX-011, CR-11-vc-MMAE) | GPNMB |
| II | Melanoma | 1/62 CR, 6 PR, 33 SD, and median OS was 9.8 months | Alopecia, neutropenia, and rash | – | |
|
| II | Advanced GPNMB-expressing breast cancer | ORR 6% | Rash and pruritus | Trial completed | |||
| SAR566658 | CA-6 |
| II | Solid tumors expressing CA6 | 1/114 CR, 8 PR, and 39% SD | Mild toxicities: fatigue, neuropathy, neutropenia | Trial completed | |
| SGN-LIV1A | LIV-1 |
| I | Breast cancer | ORR 11% and SD or better achieved in 63% of patients | No dose-limiting toxicities | Used in combination with trastuzumab | |
| PF-06647020 | Tyrosine kinase 7 |
| I | Advanced solid tumors | 1/76 CR, 5 PR, 12 SD, and 4 PD | Most toxicities were mild: nausea, alopecia, neutropenia | – | |
| PF-6647263 | Ephrin-A4 |
| I | Advanced solid tumors | 5/48 PR | Dose-limiting toxicities were observed in 6 patients | Trial completed | |
| SAR428926 | LAMP-1 |
| I | Solid tumors | – | – | – | |
| PCA062 | P-cadherin 3 |
| I | Triple negative breast cancer, head and neck cancer, esophageal cancer | – | – | – | |
| U3-1402 | HER3 |
| I/II | HER3+ metastatic breast Cancer | – | – | – | |
| HuMax-Axl | Axl |
| Ovarian, cervical, endometrial, NSCLC, thyroid cancer, and melanoma | – | – | – | ||
| MEDI3726 | PMSA |
| I | Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer | – | – | Used in combination with enzalutamide | |
| CAR T cells | ||||||||
| T4 immunotherapy | ErbB dimers, IL4 |
| I | HNSCC | DCR 44% | All grade 2 (or less) adverse events | Intratumoral T-4 therapy | |
| CART-19 | CD19 |
| I | B-ALL | CR rates were 95 and 77% on patients with < 5% of blasts in the bone marrow and those with > 5%, respectively | CRS and neurotoxicity | – | |
|
| I/II | NHL | ORR 82% and CR 39% after 8 months | 31% Febrile neutropenia, 24% thrombocytopenia, 21% encephalopathy, and 13% CRS | Some patients received steroids and others tocilizumab | |||
|
| I/II | ALL, NHL, and CLL | 31/33 ALL patients achieved CR, 6/12 CLL with CR, 84% ORR in NHL | 16% CRS and 31% neurotoxicity | All CLL pts had received prior ibrutinib | |||
| Anti-GPC3 | GPC3 |
| I | GPC3+ HCC | 1/13 with PR | No dose-limiting toxicities | – | |
| CART-133 | CD133 |
| I | HCC, pancreas, CRC, cholangiocarcinoma | 21/23 PFS ranging from 8 to 22 weeks | Hyperbilirubinemia and CRS | – | |
| bb2121 | BCMA |
| I | MM | 6/11 ORR | Only grade 1–2 CRS | ORR seen in patients who received higher doses of T cells | |
| Anti-kappa light chain | Kappa light chains |
| I | Kappa (+) CLL, NHL, and MM | 2/9 CR, 1/9 PR. 4/7 patients with MM had SD | None | – | |
| Anti-CD30 | CD30 |
| I | HL and NHL | 2 patients with HL and 1 w/ ALCL achieved CR, 3 patients with HL achieved SD | None | – | |
|
| Ib/II | CD30+ HL and NHL | – | – | – | |||
| Anti-IL13 | IL13Rα2 |
| I | Glioblastoma | CR in 1 patient | None | – | |
| TCR gene-modified T cell therapy | ||||||||
| NY-ESO-1c259t | NY-ESO-1 and HLA-A2 |
| I/II | Sarcoma | ORR 50%, 1 case of CR | 96% Leukopenia, 79% anemia, 79% thrombocytopenia, 1 fatal bone marrow failure, and 11/34 cases with CRS | – | |
| Anti-E6 | E6 |
| I/II | HPV 16+ carcinomas (e.g., cervical, anal, pharyngeal) | 2/12 PR | No dose-limiting toxicity | Study completed | |
| Anti-MAGE A10 | MAGE-A10 |
| I | Urothelial cancer, HNSCC, or melanoma | – | – | – | |
| Tumor-infiltrating cell therapy | ||||||||
| TIL | Varies depending on tumor |
| II | Melanoma | CR24% | 13/48 patients who received TBI developed thrombotic microangiopathy not seen in patients with no TBI | In combination with TBI | |
| MIL | Varies depending on tumor |
| I/II | MM | 27% CR, 27% PR, 23% SD, and 14% PD | Not mentioned | Study completed | |
| Oncolytic viruses | ||||||||
| Coxsackievirus A21 (CVA21–CAVATAK) | ICAM-1-expressing tumors |
| Ib | Melanoma, NSCLC, bladder, and prostate cancer | ORR 73% and DCR 91% in melanoma | No dose-limiting toxicities | In combination with pembrolizumab | |
|
| ||||||||
|
| I | Melanoma | ORR 38% | Minimal toxicity | In conjunction with ipilimumab | |||
| DCR 88% | ||||||||
| Pelareorep (Reolysin) | Different tumors |
| II | Melanoma | ORR 21%, 1-year survival 43%, DCR85% | Fever was the most common toxicity | In combination with carboplatin and paclitaxel. Study was completed | |
|
| II | Breast cancer | Median OS was 17.4 months for patients with both agents and 10.4 months for patients with paclitaxel alone | Fatigue, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea | In combination with paclitaxel, or paclitaxel alone | |||
| DNX-2401 | Glioblastoma |
| I | Glioblastoma | 1 patient was alive 30 months into treatment and 2 after 23 months | Related to temozolamide or underlying disease | In combination with temozolamide | |
| Enadenotucirev (EnAd) | Tumors of epithelial origin | NCT02636036 | I | Epithelial tumors | – | – | In combination with nivolumab | |
| Vaccines | ||||||||
| HS-110 (Viagenpumatucel-L) | Lung adenocarcinoma cells |
| I/IIb | Lung adenocarcinoma | ORR 50% | Injection site reactions, maculopapular rash | In combination with nivolumab | |
| gp96 | Gastric cancer cells |
| II | Gastric cancer | 2-year OS was 81.9% in the vaccination arm vs. 67.9% with chemotherapy-alone arm | No clinically significant adverse events | In combination with oxaliplatin | |
| GM.CD40L | Lung adenocarcinoma cells |
| I/II | Lung adenocarcinoma | Median OS was 9.4 months | No dose-limiting toxicities | Some patients had added CCL21 to GM.CD40L | |
| RNA-lipoplex (RNA(LIP)) | Melanoma antigens |
| I/II | Melanoma | – | No dose-limiting toxicities | – | |
| VXM01 | VEGFR-2 |
| I | Pancreatic cancer | OS was 9.3 months vs 8.4 months (placebo) | Lymphopenia and increased diarrhea | Oral vaccine | |
| INO-5150 | Prostate cancer antigens |
| I | Prostate cancer | 10% PD | No dose-limiting toxicities | Used with or without IL-12. Study is not recruiting patients | |
| INVAC-1 | Human telomerase |
| I | Solid tumors | 12/20 SD | Asthenia and local reaction at injection site | – | |
| pTVG-HP | PAP |
| II | Prostate cancer | – | – | Ongoing | |
| ADXS11-001 | E7 antigen |
| I | Cervical cancer | – | Only 1 > grade 2 adverse event (hypotension) | Ongoing | |
| AdMA3 | MAGE-A3 |
| I | Solid tumors | Evidence of induction of pro-inflammatory genes and subsequent anti-tumor activity | 4/41 patient developed dose-limiting toxicities (hypoxia, dyspnea, vomiting, headache) | Used in conjunction with an oncolytic virus (MG1MA3) | |
| AdHER2ECTM | Her2 |
| I | Her2(+) tumors | 1/27 CR, 1 PR, and 5 SD | Local injection site reactions | – | |
| CMB305 | NY-ESO-1 |
| I | NY-ESO-1-expressing solid tumors | Increase of anti-NY-ESO-1 T cells in 65% of patients and anti-NY-ESO-1 antibodies in 68% of patients | – | – | |
| MVA | Brachyury |
| I | Advanced solid malignancies | 82% of patients developed brachyury-specific immune responses | No dose-limiting toxicities were observed | Trial completed | |
| BPX101 | Human prostate-specific membrane antigen |
| I | Prostate cancer | 1/18 with CR and 2/18 PR | No dose-limiting toxicities | Trial completed | |
| WT-1 | WT-1-expressing tumors |
| II | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | Increased OS from 21.5 (gemcitabine alone) to 34.2 (gemcitabine with WT-1 vaccine) | – | Used in conjunction with gemcitabine | |
| WT4869 | WT-1-expressing tumors |
| I/II | MDS | ORR 18.2%, median OS 64.71 weeks | 30.8% Neutropenia, 7.7% febrile neutropenia, and 7.7% elevated CPK | Trial completed | |
| Galinpepimut-S | WT-1-expressing tumors |
| II | Pleural mesothelioma | PFS 45%, median OS 22.8 months | Mild and not clinically significant | Trial completed | |
| DPX-Survivac | Survivin-expressing tumors |
| Ib | Ovarian, fallopian, and peritoneal cancer | Sustained immune responses of varying magnitude and duration | Skin ulceration | Trial completed | |
| AE37 | Her2 |
| II | Her2(+) breast cancer | Disease-free survival improved from 51% (GM-CSF alone) to 89% (AE37+ GM-CSF) | Vaccines is safe and well tolerated | Used with GM-CSF | |
| Multi-HLA binding peptides | HSP70 and GPC3 |
| I | Solid tumors | Decreased tumor-marker expression in 6/12 patients and disease control in 5/12 patients | No severe toxicities | – | |
| URLC10-CDCA1-KOC1 | URLC10, CDCA1, KOC1 |
| II | Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | No significant difference of relapse-free survival compared to control group, but there was good immunological response | – | – | |
| Poly-ICLC | TLR-3 |
| I/II | Solid tumors including melanoma, breast, and HNSCC | 1/8 SD for 41 weeks; the remainder of patients showed PD | Mild and limited to the site of application | Study was terminated | |
| BO-112 | MDA-5 and NOXA |
| I | Melanoma and breast cancer | – | 1 case of reversible thrombocytopenia | – | |
| IVAC MUTANOME | Personal tumor neoantigens |
| I | Melanoma | 8/13 patients remained recurrence-free for the entire follow-up period (12–23 months) | No major adverse events | Ongoing | |
| Immunogenic personal neoantigen vaccine | Personal tumor neoantigens |
| I | Melanoma | 4/6 patients that had no recurrence of the disease at 25 months after vaccination | Mild flu-like symptoms, injection site reactions, rash, and fatigue | – | |
| Targeting MDSCs | ||||||||
| DS-8273a | TRAIL-R2 (DR-5) |
| I | Solid tumors | – | No dose-limiting toxicities | – | |
| Cytokine gene therapy | ||||||||
| Ad-RTS-hIL-12 | IL-12 |
| I | Glioblastoma | Median OS 12.5 months | Flu-like illness, grade 3 CRS, transaminitis | Used in with Veledimex | |
| NKTR-214 | IL-2 |
| I/II | Solid malignancies | 1 patient had unconfirmed CR | No dose-limiting toxicities | Used in conjunction with nivolumab | |
|
| I/II | Solid malignancies | 23% achieved tumor size reduction ranging from 10–30% | No dose-limiting toxicities | – | |||
| Agents targeting tumor microenvironment | ||||||||
| BMS-986205 | IDO |
| I | Solid tumors | – | Hepatitis, rash | Used in conjunction with nivolumab | |
| Indoximod | IDO |
| II | Melanoma | ORR 52% | No significant toxicities | Used in conjunction with ipilimumab, nivolumab, or pembrolizumab | |
| NCT02077881 | II | Pancreatic | ORR 37% | One case of colitis | Used with both gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel | |||
| NCT01560923 | II | Prostate | Median PFS increased from 4.1 to 10.3 months | No significant adverse events | – | |||
| Epacadostat | IDO |
| I/II | Solid and hematologic malignancies | ORR of 75% (melanoma) and 4% (CRC) | No dose-limiting toxicities | – | |
| MEDI9197 | TLR7/8 |
| I | Solid malignancies | – | Mild adverse events only | In combination with durvalumab and radiation therapy | |
| PG545 (pixatimod, pINN) | TLR9/IL-12 |
| I | Solid malignancies | SD for 24 weeks, DCR of 38% | Dose-limiting toxicities in 3/23 patients | – | |
| Poly-ICLC | TLR3 |
| I | HCC | PFS 66% at 6 months, 28% at 24 months | Most grade I–II adverse events | In combination with radiation therapy | |
| OS 69% at 1 year, 38% at 2 years | ||||||||
| CB-1158 | Arginase |
| I | Solid malignancies | – | No dose-limiting toxicities | In conjunction with nivolumab | |
| Oncolytic peptides | ||||||||
| LTX-315 | Tumor mitochondrial membranes |
| I | Melanoma and breast cancer | 2/28 CR, 5 patients had a decreased of > 50% of the tumor size, and 8 patients achieved SD | Most common adverse events were mild local erythema, flushing, pruritus, and transient hypotension | In combination with ipilimumab or pembrolizumab | |
Abbreviations: ALL acute lymphocytic leukemia, ALCL anaplastic large cell lymphoma, AML acute myeloid leukemia, B-ALL B cell acute lymphocytic leukemia, CAR chimeric antigen receptor, BCMA B cell maturation antigen, CEACAM CEA cell adhesion molecule, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, CPK creatine phosphokinase, CR complete response; CRC colorectal cancer, DLBCL diffuse large B cell lymphoma, CRS cytokine release syndrome, DCR disease control rate, DLL3 delta-like protein 3, GCC guanylyl cyclase C, GPC3 glypican-3, gPNMB glycoprotein non-metastatic B, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, HD Hodgkin’s disease, HNSCC head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, IDO indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, MDSCs myeloid-derived suppressor cells, MIL marrow-infiltrating lymphocyte, MM multiple myeloma, NHL non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, NSCLC non-small cell lung carcinoma, MVA Modified Vaccinia Ankara, OS overall survival, ORR objective response rate, PAP prostatic acid phosphatase, PD progressive disease, PFS progression-free survival, PSMA prostate-specific membrane antigen, Poly-ICLC polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid polylysine carboxymethylcellulose, PR partial response, SCLC small cell lung cancer, SD stable disease, TBI total body irradiation, TIL tumor infiltrating lymphocyte, TLPLDC tumor lysate, particle-loaded, dendritic cell, TLR toll-like receptor, VEGFR-2 vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2, WT-1 Wilms tumor gene-1