| Literature DB >> 29433552 |
Jian Li1, Wenwen Li2, Kejia Huang3, Yang Zhang3, Gary Kupfer4, Qi Zhao5.
Abstract
Recently, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy for the treatment CD19-positive B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. While CAR-T has achieved remarkable success in the treatment of hematopoietic malignancies, whether it can benefit solid tumor patients to the same extent is still uncertain. Even though hundreds of clinical trials are undergoing exploring a variety of tumor-associated antigens (TAA), no such antigen with comparable properties like CD19 has yet been identified regarding solid tumors CAR-T immunotherapy. Inefficient T cell trafficking, immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, suboptimal antigen recognition specificity, and lack of safety control are currently considered as the main obstacles in solid tumor CAR-T therapy. Here, we reviewed the solid tumor CAR-T clinical trials, emphasizing the studies with published results. We further discussed the challenges that CAR-T is facing for solid tumor treatment and proposed potential strategies to improve the efficacy of CAR-T as promising immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Antigen recognition specificity; CAR-T; Safety control; Solid tumor; Tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29433552 PMCID: PMC5809840 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-018-0568-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Molecular mechanism of chimeric antigen receptor T cell-mediated antitumor activity. a The chimeric T cell receptor coding sequence is delivered by viral vector. After entering into T cells (beige), virus was uncoated and transgene was preferably integrated at genome transcriptional start sites using specific vector designs, such as MLV retrovirus and piggyBac transposon. b CAR transgenes were endogenously transcript by host machinery, translated, and later inserted onto the T cell surface. c Association of CARs to TAA (orange) on tumor cell surface activates T cell for immunological response, for example, signaling network of CAR-T composed of CD8-CD28-CD137-CD3ζ domains was shown in (d). CAR-T-mediated immune response was reported to be amplified by ZAP70, TRAF1, PI3K, and GRB2 as well as other uncharacterized factors, giving rise to upregulation of signaling intermediates and subsequent pro-death gene transcriptions. e Upon CAR activation, T cells secreted cytokines (brown), perforins (bright yellow), and granzymes (blue) as well as activated death receptors, which triggered downstream targets. These subcellular events directly or subsequently contribute to specific death of tumor cells, including perforin and granzyme release, cytokine production, direct lysis, apoptosis, necrosis, reprogrammed phenotype, and immuno-memory formation in T cells, tumor cells (gray), macrophages (pink) (via IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, MCP-1, IP-10, TNF-α, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, IFN-γ), NK cells (cyan) (via IL-12, TNF-α, IFN-γ), Treg cells (navy) (via IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-12, IL-15, IFN-β, IFN-γ, TSLP), and dendritic cells (yellow) (via IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, TNF-α, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, IFN-γ). Abbreviation: NK cells natural killer cells, TAA tumor-associated antigen, Treg cells regulatory T cells
Selected CAR-T clinical trials targeting solid tumor-associated antigens
| Antigen | CAR design | Identifier | Disease condition | Phase | Status | Sponsor | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FR-α | 1st (FcRγ) | NCT00019136 | Ovarian cancer | I | Completed | National Cancer Institute | [ | |
| 4th | NCT03185468 | Bladder cancer, urothelial carcinoma bladder | I/II | Recruiting | Shenzhen Geno-immune Medical Institute | |||
| CAIX | 1st | DDHK97-29/P00.0040C | Renal cell carcinoma | I/II | Completed | Erasmus University Medical Center | First clinical study of its nature in Europe | [ |
| L1-CAM | 2nd and 3 | NCT02311621 | Neuroblastoma | I | Recruiting | Seattle Children’s Hospital | ||
| 1st | NCT00006480 | Neuroblastoma | I | Completed | Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center | [ | ||
| MSLN | NA | NCT01583686 | Cervical, pancreatic, ovarian, and lung cancer, mesothelioma | I/II | Recruiting | National Cancer Institute | [ | |
| 2nd | NCT01355965 | Malignant pleural mesothelioma | I | Completed | University of Pennsylvania | Intravenous (IV) administration of RNA mesothelin redirected autologous T cell | [ | |
| 2nd | NCT02159716 | Pancreatic, ovarian cancer, malignant epithelial pleural mesothelioma | I | Completed | University of Pennsylvania | |||
| 2nd | NCT01897415 | Metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | I | Completed | University of Pennsylvania | Intravenous (IV) administration of RNA mesothelin redirected autologous T cell | [ | |
| 2nd | NCT02465983 | Pancreatic cancer | I | Completed | University of Pennsylvania | |||
| 2nd | NCT02414269 | Mesothelioma, lung and breast cancer | I | Recruiting | MSKCC | iCasp9M28z T cell | ||
| 2nd | NCT02706782 | Pancreatic cancer | I | Recruiting | Shanghai GeneChem Co., Ltd. | Vascular intervention-mediated CAR-T infusion | ||
| NA | NCT03030001 | Solid tumors | I/II | Recruiting | Ningbo Cancer Hospital | PD-1 antibody expressing mesothelin-specific CAR-T cells | ||
| NA | NCT03182803 | Advanced solid tumors | I/II | Recruiting | Shanghai Cell Therapy Research Institute | CTLA-4/PD-1 antibodies expressing mesoCAR-T | ||
| HER2 | NA | NCT00924287 | HER2-positive sarcoma | I/II | Terminated | National Cancer Institute | [ | |
| 2nd | NCT00902044 | HER2-positive sarcoma | I/II | Recruiting | Baylor College of Medicine | [ | ||
| NA | NCT01935843 | HER-2 positive solid tumors | I/II | Recruiting | Chinese PLA General Hospital | [ | ||
| 2nd | NCT02547961 | Breast cancer | I/II | Completed | Fuda Cancer Hospital | |||
| 2nd | NCT02442297 | Glioblastoma | I | Recruiting | Baylor College of Medicine | |||
| 2nd | NCT01109095 | Glioblastoma multiforme | I | Ongoing | Baylor College of Medicine | Genetically modified HER.CAR CMV-specific CTLs | [ | |
| 2nd | NCT00889954 | HER2 positive malignancies | I | Ongoing | Baylor College of Medicine | TGFbeta dominant-negative receptor (DNR) expressing EBV specific lymphocytes | ||
| EGFR | 2nd | NCT01869166 | Advanced EGFR-positive solid tumors | I/II | Recruiting | Chinese PLA General Hospital | [ | |
| NA | NCT03182816 | Advanced solid tumor | I/II | Recruiting | Shanghai Cell Therapy Research Institute | Anti-CTLA-4/PD-1 expressing EGFR-CAR-T | ||
| NA | NCT02873390 | Advanced solid tumor | Recruiting | Ningbo Cancer Hospital | PD-1 antibody expressing CAR-T cells | |||
| NA | NCT02862028 | Advanced solid tumor | I/II | Recruiting | Shanghai International Medical Center | PD-1 antibody expressing CAR-T cells | ||
| EGFRvIII | 3rd | NCT01454596 | Glioma, glioblastoma, brain cancer | I/II | Recruiting | National Cancer Institute | [ | |
| NA | NCT02209376 | EGFRvIII positive glioma | I | Ongoing | University of Pennsylvania | |||
| NCT03170141 | Glioblastoma multiforme | I/II | Recruiting | Shenzhen Geno-immune Medical Institute | 4SCAR-IgT cells producing PD1 and PD-L1 antibodies | |||
| IL13Rα2 | 1st | NCT00730613 | Glioblastoma | I | Completed | City of Hope Medical Center | CAR expresses the Hy/TK selection/suicide fusion protein | [ |
| 2nd | NCT02208362 | Glioblastoma | I | Recruiting | City of Hope Medical Center | Hinge-optimized | ||
| 1st | NCT01082926 | Glioblastoma | I | Completed | City of Hope Medical Center | T cells modified to express HyTK and to be resistant to glucocorticoids, in combination with interleukin-2 | ||
| CEA | 2nd | NCT01373047 | Liver metastases | I | Completed | Roger Williams MC | [ | |
| 2nd | NCT02416466 | Liver metastases | I | Ongoing | Roger Williams MC | [ | ||
| 2nd | NCT02349724 | Lung, colorectal, gastric, breast, and pancreatic cancer | I | Recruiting | Southwest Hospital | [ | ||
| 2nd | NCT02862704 | Liver metastases | I/II | Recruiting | Xijing Hospital | MG7 specific CAR-T, which is a glycosylated protein of CEA | ||
| NA | NCT02850536 | Liver metastases | I | Recruiting | Roger Williams MC | delivered via the hepatic artery using the Surefire Infusion System (SIS) | ||
| NA | NCT00004178 | Solid tumor | I | Completed | Roger Williams MC | |||
| 1st | NCT01212887 | Adult solid tumor, | I | Terminated | Cancer Research UK | MFE23 scFv-expressing autologous anti-CEA MFEz T lymphocytes | ||
| GD2 | 1st | NCT00085930 | Neuroblastoma | I | Ongoing | Baylor College of Medicine | 14g2a.zeta chimeric receptor-transduced autologous EBV specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (EBV-CTL) w/o lymphodepletion | [ |
| 3rd | NCT01822652 | Neuroblastoma | I | Ongoing | Baylor College of Medicine | iC9-GD2-CD28-OX40 (iC9-GD2) T cells | [ | |
| 3rd | NCT01953900 | Sarcomas | I | Ongoing | Baylor College of Medicine | [ | ||
| 3rd | NCT02439788 | Neuroblastoma | I | Withdrawn | Baylor College of Medicine | 3rd generation GD2 specific CAR and inducible caspase 9 safety switch transduced autologous natural killer T cells | ||
| NA | NCT01460901 | Neuroblastoma | I | Completed | Children’s Mercy Hospital, Kansas | [ | ||
| 3rd | NCT02107963 | Osteosarcoma, neuroblastoma, Melanoma | I | Completed | National Cancer Institute | [ | ||
| 4th | NCT02765243 | Neuroblastoma, effects of immunotherapy | II | Recruiting | Zhujiang Hospital | |||
| 4th | NCT02992210 | Solid tumor | I/II | Recruiting | Shenzhen Geno-immune Medical Institute | 4th generation CAR (4SCAR) fused with an inducible apoptotic caspase 9 domain | ||
| MUC1 | NA | NCT02617134 | Glioma, colorectal and gastric carcinoma | I/II | Recruiting | PersonGen BioTherapeutics | ||
| 3rd | NCT02587689 | NSCLC, hepatocellular, pancreatic, and breast carcinoma | I/II | Recruiting | PersonGen BioTherapeutics | [ | ||
| NA | NCT03179007 | Advanced solid tumor | Recruiting | Ningbo Cancer Hospital | Anti-CTLA-4/PD-1 expressing MUC1-CAR-T | |||
| PSMA | 2nd | NCT01140373 | Prostate cancer | I | Ongoing | MSKCC | ||
| NA | NCT01929239 | Prostate cancer | I/II | Suspended (funding) | Roger Williams MC | [ | ||
| 1st | BB-1ND12084 | Prostate cancer | I | Roger Williams MC | [ | |||
| 4th | NCT03185468 | Bladder cancer, urothelial carcinoma bladder | I/II | Recruiting | Shenzhen Geno-immune Medical Institute | |||
| PSCA | NA | NCT03198052 | Lung cancer | I | Recruiting | Guangzhou Medical University | ||
| NA | NCT02744287 | Pancreatic cancer | I | Recruiting | Bellicum Pharmaceuticals | |||
| FAP | 2nd | NCT01722149 | Malignant pleural mesothelioma | I | Recruiting | University of Zurich | [ | |
| CD133 | 1st, 2nd | NCT02541370 | CD133-positive malignancies | I | Recruiting | Chinese PLA General Hospital | [ | |
| cMet | NA | NCT01837602 | Breast | I | Ongoing | University of Pennsylvania | cMet RNA CAR-T cells | [ |
| 2nd | NCT03060356 | Malignant melanoma, breast cancer | I | Recruiting | University of Pennsylvania | cMet RNA CAR-T cells | ||
| EphA2 | NA | NCT02575261 | Glioma | I/II | Completed | Fuda Cancer Hospital | ||
| GPC3 | 2nd | NCT02715362 | Hepatic carcinoma | I/II | Recruiting | Shanghai GeneChem Co., Ltd. | Administration by transcatheter arterial infusion (TAI) method | |
| NCT02723942 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | I/II | Completed | Fuda Cancer Hospital, Guangzhou | ||||
| NCT02876978 | Lung squamous cell carcinoma | I | Recruiting | Carsgen Therapeutics, Ltd. | ||||
| NCT03130712 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | I/II | Recruiting | Shanghai GeneChem Co., Ltd. | ||||
| 3rd | NCT03198546 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | I | Recruiting | Guangzhou Medical University | |||
| VEGFR-II | NA | NCT01218867 | Melanoma, renal cancer | I/II | Completed | National Cancer Institute | ||
| ROR1 | NA | NCT02706392 | Breast, lung carcinoma | I | Recruiting | Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center | [ | |
| EpCAM | NA | NCT02729493 | Liver neoplasms | Recruiting | Sinobioway Cell Therapy Co., Ltd. | |||
| NA | NCT02725125 | Stomach neoplasms | Recruiting | Sinobioway Cell Therapy Co., Ltd. | ||||
| 2nd | NCT02915445 | Malignant neoplasm of nasopharynx, breast Cancer | I | Recruiting | Sichuan University | |||
| 2nd | NCT03013712 | Solid tumors | I/II | Recruiting | First Affiliated Hospital of Chengdu Medical College | |||
| MUC16ecto | 2nd | NCT02498912 | Solid tumors | I | Recruiting | MSKCC | T cells genetically engineered to secrete IL-12 | [ |
Representative clinical trials using CAR-T to treat solid tumors are grouped based on the tumor-associated antigens they are targeting. Trial-related information were mainly collected from published results and
Abbreviations: CAIX carboxyanhydrase-IX, CEA carcinoembryonic antigen, cMET hepatocyte growth factor receptor, EGFR epidermal growth factor receptor, EpCAM epithelial cell adhesion molecule, EphA2 EPH receptor A2, FAP fibroblast activation protein α, GD2 disialoganglioside, GPC3 glypican-3, HER2 human epidermal growth factor receptor-2, L1-CAM L1 cell adhesion molecule, MSLN mesothelin, MUC1 mucin, NA not applicable, PSMA prostate-specific membrane antigen, ROR1 receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 1, VEGFR vascular endothelial growth factor receptor
Fig. 2Tumor-associated antigens targeted in CAR-T therapy. Schematic illustration of a human body whose tissues or organs have been investigated in preclinical and clinical studies for solid tumor immunotherapy using CAR-T, including brain (green), lungs (beige), mammary gland (orange), liver (purple), stomach (red), pancreas (blue), kidneys (pink), colon (cyan), male reproductive system (brown), ovary (yellow), and bones (gray) as well as skin (black). Abbreviation: CCA cholangiocarcinoma, MPM malignant pleural mesothelioma, NSCLC non-small-cell lung carcinoma, RCC renal cell carcinoma
CAR-T clinical trials for solid tumors with published results
| Antigen | Identifier | Patients | Dosage | Persistence | Outcome | Adverse events | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FR-a | NCT00019136 | 14 (33–60) | 0.3–5 × 1010 T cells | Up to > 1 year | NE: 14 | Grade 3/4 toxicities including hypotension and dyspnea as well as less frequently fatigue, leukopenia, rigors, sinus tachycardia, and diarrhea, in some patients receiving IL-2 | [ |
| CAIX | DDHK9729/P00.0040C | 12 | 0.2–2.1 × 109 | Up to 4 weeks | NE: 12 | Transient liver enzyme disturbances (grade 3/4) observed in 4 patients, caused by attack of CAR-T cells to CAIX-expressing bile duct epithelial cells | [ |
| L1-CAM | NCT00006480 | 6 | 1 × 108–1.1 × 109/m2 | Up to 42 days | CR: 1 (1,5) | Grade 3 lymphopenia, neutropenia, low hemoglobin and bacteremia caused by 108/m2 CAR-T cells infusion | [ |
| MSLN | NCT01355965 | 2 | 3 infusions with 0.1–1 × 109 cells or 8 infusions with 3 × 108 cells and 2 infusions with 2 × 108 cells | Transient (mRNA CAR) | PR: 1 (6) | Anaphylactic reaction in one patient, leading to grade 4 cardiac arrest, respiratory failure, disseminated intravenous coagulation, and CRS | [ |
| NCT01897415 | NA | 3 times per week for 3 weeks | Transient (mRNA CAR) | SD: 2 | Grade > 3 toxicities included abdominal pain (1) and back pain (1) | [ | |
| HER2 | NCT00924287 | 1 | 1 × 1010 total | NA | Death: 1 | Respiratory distress and dramatic pulmonary infiltrate on chest X-ray were observed soon after CAR-T cell administration. | [ |
| NCT01109095 | 17 | 1 × 106-1 × 108/m2 | Up to 12 weeks | SD: 7 | NA | [ | |
| NCT00902044 | 19 | 1 × 104-1 × 108/m2 | Up to 18 month | SD: 4 (0,5; 0,5–14) | Fever observed in 1 patient | [ | |
| NCT01935843 | 11 | 2.1 × 106/kg (range 1.4–3.8 × 106/kg), 1 to 2 cycles | Up to 80 days | PR: 1 (4.5) | Mild-to-moderate fatigue, nausea, vomiting, myalgia, arthralgia, and lymphopenia, Except one grade 3 acute febrile syndrome and one abnormal elevation of transaminase | [ | |
| EGFR | NCT01869166 | 11 | 4 × 105–2.54 × 107/kg | Up to 37 weeks | PR: 2 (3; 2–3,5) | Mild skin toxicity, nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, and hypotension; one patient suffered from a transient grade 3/4 increase in serum lipase | [ |
| EGFR and CD133 | NCT01869166 NCT02541370 | 1 | EGFR: 2.2 × 106/kg first cycle, 2.1 × 106/kg second cycle, | NA | EGDR: PR (8.5) | EGFR: mild chills, fever, fatigue, vomiting and muscle soreness, and a 9-day duration of delayed lower fever | [ |
| IL-13Ra2 | NCT00730613 | 3 | 1.6 × 108 for first cycle + 3 × 108 for second to fourth cycle | Up to 14 weeks | PR: 2 (12; 10–14) | Grade 3 headache in two patients receiving 108 CAR-T cells infusion | [ |
| NCT02208362 | 1 | Intracavitary infusions (cycles 1 through 6) and intraventricular infusions (cycles 7 through 16), maximum dose: 10 × 106 cells | Detectable at 149 days after enrollment | CR:7.5 | No CAR-T cell infusion related toxic effects of grade 3 or higher were observed | [ | |
| CEA | NCT01373047 | 7 | 1 × 108–1 × 1010 cells | NA | SD: 1 (23) | Grade 3 fever and tachycardia (1 patient), associated to high-dose IL-2 administration. | [ |
| GD2 | NCT00085930 | 19 | 1.2 × 107-1 × 108/m2 (single infusion) | Up to 192 weeks for ATC and 96 weeks for CTLs | CR: 11 | Mild to moderate local pain at the site of tumor necrosis in two patients | [ |
| MUC1 | NCT02587689 | 1 | 5 × 105 cells per lesion | NA | PR: 1 | Mild headache, muscle pain, nasal congestion, and abdominal bloating discomfort, and a transient CRS was experienced | [ |
| PSMA | BB-IND 12084 | 5 | 1 × 109–1 × 1010 cells | Up to 4 week | PR: 3 | Grade 3/4 hematologic toxicities including neutropenia, neutropenic fever, and thrombocytopenia in all the patients; anemia, hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, and appendicitis in one patient. | [ |
| VEGFR-II | NCT01218867 | 23 | 1 × 106–3 × 1010 cells | NA | PR: 1 | Grade 3/4 toxicity include nausea, vomiting, hypoxia, and elevated levels of aspartate transaminase, alanine transaminase, and bilirubin | Results available at |
The patient characteristics, CAR-T treatment dosage, CAR-T cell persistence, clinical outcomes, and adverse events of CAR-T clinical trials with published results are listed
Abbreviations: NE no response, CR clinical response, PR partial response, SD stable disease, PD progress disease, NA not available
Fig. 3Strategies being exploited to overcome challenges in CAR-T therapy in solid tumor. Various strategies are currently being tested in preclinical and clinical studies to overcome the challenges facing CAR-T therapy for solid tumor (gray), including a, b enhancing T cell (beige) trafficking, c reforming tumor microenvironment (pink represented physiological barriers), d, e anti-immunosuppression, elevating antigen recognition towards tumor (f, g), and healthy cells (darker beige) (h), as well as i–l improving safety control using suicide switch or on-switch. Detailed mechanisms were further illustrated in the section “Overcoming Challenges with Smarter CAR Designs”