| Literature DB >> 29904904 |
Alex Karlsson-Parra1,2, Juliana Kovacka3, Emilia Heimann3, Margareth Jorvid3, Sijme Zeilemaker3, Sharon Longhurst3, Peter Suenaert3.
Abstract
Intratumoral administration of an immune primer is a therapeutic vaccine strategy aimed to trigger dendritic cell (DC)-mediated cross-presentation of cell-associated tumor antigens to cytotoxic CD8+ T cells without the need for tumor antigen characterization. The prevailing view is that these cross-presenting DCs have to be directly activated by pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPS), including Toll-like receptor ligands or live microbial agents like oncolytic viruses. Emerging data are however challenging this view, indicating that the cross-presenting machinery in DCs is suboptimally activated by direct PAMP recognition, and that endogenous inflammatory factors are the main drivers of DC-mediated cross-presentation within the tumor. Here we present preclinical mode of action data, CMC and regulatory data, as well as initial clinical data on ilixadencel. This cell-based drug product is an off-the-shelf immune primer, consisting of pro-inflammatory allogeneic DCs secreting high amounts of pro-inflammatory chemokines and cytokines at the time of intratumoral administration. The mechanism of action of ilixadencel is to induce recruitment and activation of endogenous immune cells, including NK cells that subsequently promotes cross-presentation of cell-associated tumor antigens by co-recruited DCs.Entities:
Keywords: NK cell; cross-presentation; dendritic cell; ilixadencel; intratumoral
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29904904 PMCID: PMC6002422 DOI: 10.1007/s11095-018-2438-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharm Res ISSN: 0724-8741 Impact factor: 4.200
Fig. 1Proposed mode of action for intratumorally injected ilixadencel. After administration into the viable part of the tumor, ilixadencel DCs will release Th1-associated chemokines, including CCL4, 5 and CXCL10 that recruit immune cells, including NK-cells and pre-DCs into the tumor. The interaction between recruited NK-cells and ilixadencel DCs induce NK-cell-mediated killing of adjacent tumor cells, resulting in release of tumor-associated antigens, including neoantigens. The production of IFN-γ by activated NK-cells and TNF-α/IL-1β released by ilixadencel DCs will induce maturation as well as increase cross-presentation of engulfed cell-associated tumor antigens by recruited endogenous “bystander” DCs. Migration of these antigen-loaded and matured “bystander” DCs to the tumor-draining lymph node will finally lead to Th1-polarized activation of tumor-specific T cells, including cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, by the release of IL-12.
Overview of the Clinical Trials with Ilixadencel
| Study No | ClinicalTrials.gov identifier | Phase | Indication | Site(s) | Patients planned | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IM-101 | NCT01525017 | I | mRCC | Uppsala University Hospital, Sweden | 12 | Completed |
| IM-102 | NCT01974661 | I | HCC | Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden | 18 | Completed |
| IM-201 | NCT02432846 | II | mRCC | Multicenter in Europe and US | 88 | Active, and recruitment completed |
| IM-103 | NCT02686944 | I | GIST | Karolinska University Hospital, Sweden | Appr. 12 | Active, and recruitment completed |
Fig. 2Micrographs illustrating immunohistochemical staining of tissue samples from all 12 surgically removed primary renal RCC tumors with anti-CD8 antibodies. The surgical removal of the tumor-bearing kidney was performed 1–2 weeks after the second (last) administration of ilixadencel. Original magnification × 100. The data in figure originates from Laurell et al. [46].
Fig. 3Micrographs illustrating immunohistochemical staining of tissue samples from surgically removed primary renal RCC tumors (surgically removed 1–2 weeks after the second (last) administration of ilixadencel) in consecutive sections from one RCC tumor with high CD8+ T cell infiltration (A-D, all from patient 2). (E) illustrates CD8+ T cells in normal kidney parenchyma adjacent to tumor areas from patient 2 and (F) illustrates CD8+ T cell infiltration in a subcutaneous metastatic lesion from patient 2. Original magnification × 100. The data in figure originates from Laurell et al. [46].
Fig. 4CT-scans from a patient with CNS and liver metastases 4 months after start of ilixadencel treatment but before additional treatment with sunitinib (A and C, respectively) and 6 months (B) or 12 months (D) after start of sunitinib treatment. The data in figure originates from Laurell et al. [46].