| Literature DB >> 29966369 |
Ángela Áyen1, Yaiza Jiménez Martínez2,3, Juan A Marchal4,5,6,7, Houria Boulaiz8,9,10,11.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecological malignancy in developed countries. This is due to the lack of specific symptoms that hinder early diagnosis and to the high relapse rate after treatment with radical surgery and chemotherapy. Hence, novel therapeutic modalities to improve clinical outcomes in ovarian malignancy are needed. Progress in gene therapy has allowed the development of several strategies against ovarian cancer. Most are focused on the design of improved vectors to enhance gene delivery on the one hand, and, on the other hand, on the development of new therapeutic tools based on the restoration or destruction of a deregulated gene, the use of suicide genes, genetic immunopotentiation, the inhibition of tumour angiogenesis, the alteration of pharmacological resistance, and oncolytic virotherapy. In the present manuscript, we review the recent advances made in gene therapy for ovarian cancer, highlighting the latest clinical trials experience, the current challenges and future perspectives.Entities:
Keywords: delivery systems; gene therapy; ovarian cancer; ovarian cancer stem cells; promoter; suicide genes
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29966369 PMCID: PMC6073662 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19071930
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Algorithm for management of ovarian cancer. Figo Staging ovarian images modified from Cancer Research UK/Wikimedia Commons.
Figure 2Summary of current therapies targeting ovarian cancer through the use of cell-based vectors. (A) MSCs as vehicles for drug delivery; (B) reprogramming the T cells of patients to express CARs targeting ovarian cancer.
Strengths and weaknesses of various gene therapy strategies for ovarian cancer treatment.
| Therapeutic Strategy | Gene/System | Strong Points | Weak Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor Suppressor gene |
| Altered gene in a high percentage of OC. | Not useful in cells with a normal |
|
| Promising results in vivo | It has not been evaluated in clinical trials in OC. | |
| Oncofactor inhibition strategies |
| Gene widely studied in cancer. | It has not been evaluated in vivo or in clinical trials in OC. |
| CLDN3 | Several strategies of silencing have been studied in OC (siRNA and shRNA). | It has not been evaluated in clinical trials in OC. | |
| Suicide gene therapy | HVS-TK | Strategy widely studied in gene therapy for cancer. | Not phase 2 or 3 clinical trials published. |
| DT-A | Promising results in vivo, with minimal cytotoxicity. | It has not been evaluated in clinical trials in OC. | |
| Antiangiogenic gene therapy | VEGFRs | Promising results in vivo, with inhibition of ascities formation. | It has not been evaluated in clinical trials in OC. |
| Endostatin | Promising results in vivo. | Transient expression due to humoral immune response if adenovirus is used as delivery system. | |
| Genetic immunopotentiation | IL-12 | Potent immune-modulatory properties and ability to inhibit tumour angiogenesis. | Poor clinical benefits in the completed phase II trial. |
| CAR-T cell | Possibility of target any specific tumour antigen. | Important side effects caused in patients. | |
| Multi-Drug Resistance |
| Several strategies have been developed to knockdown it. | It has not been evaluated in clinical trials in OC. |
|
| Several strategies targeting this gene have been developed, including combined therapy with anticancer drugs. | It has not been evaluated in clinical trials in OC. | |
| Oncolytic virotherapy | VSV | Can be genetically designed to deliver therapeutic genes. | Neurotoxicity and Induction of neutralizing antibodies. |
Figure 3Tumour suppressor genes are involved in a wide variety of antitumour functions. (A) If these functions are inhibited, the tumour appears; (B) diverse strategies in gene therapy have tumour suppressor genes as a molecular target, enabling the recovery of gene function and tumour destruction.
Most frequent oncofactor inhibition approaches used in ovarian cancer.
| Gene | Function in Ovarian Cancer | Silencing Strategy | Model | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Cell migration, proliferation and differentiation | siRNA carried in nanogels | In vitro | [ |
|
| Protein degradation through ubiquitin proteasome pathway (maturation of the 20S proteasome) | shRNA carried in a lentiviral system | In vitro | [ |
|
| Regulation of MET, which is involved in cellular growth and migration, angiogenesis, invasion and metastasis | shRNA plasmid | In vitro | [ |
|
| Component of histone deacetylase 1 involved in transcriptional regulation. May enhance cell invasion, migration, adhesion and anoikis-resistance. | siRNA plasmid | In vitro | [ |
|
| Prostaglandin synthesis, involved in stimulation of proliferation and angiogenesis in cancer | siRNA and shRNA plasmids | In vitro and in vivo | [ |
|
| Proliferation and differentiation of the urogenital system | ASODN carried in liposomes | In vitro | [ |
|
| Regulation of multiple oncogenes and suppressor gene expressions involved in cell proliferation and apoptosis and angiogenesis | shRNA carried in DOTAP-cholesterol liposomes | In vitro and in vivo | [ |
|
| Transcriptional regulator of the adaptive response to hypoxia by activation of genes involved in cell proliferation and migration, angiogenesis, apoptosis and glucose metabolism | siRNA through FA-PEG-COL nanoparticles | In vitro | [ |
|
| Component of tight junction (TJ) of epithelial cells and cancer cells, so is involved in invasion and metastasis | siRNA carried in lipidoid molecules, shRNA carried in PLGA-NPs, shRNA carried in F-P-LP | In vitro and in vivo | [ |
|
| Cell development, proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. | siRNA carried in cationic cholesterol derivative-based liposomes | In vitro | [ |
|
| Inhibition of cytolytic activity of complement | shRNA carried by a recombinant retrovirus | In vitro and in vivo | [ |
|
| DNA methylation, involved in tumorigenesis, relapse and resistance of ovarian cancer. | CRISPR-Cas9 delivered by F-LP | In vitro and in vivo | [ |
Current ovarian cancer gene therapy clinical trials available in [114] “clinicaltrials.gov” until May 2018 using the terms “ovarian cancer” and “gene therapy” as key words.
| Therapeutic Strategy | Intervention | Clinical Trial Reference | Phase | Year (First–Last Posted) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| HSV-TK + GCV | NCT00964756 | Phase 1 | 2009–2013 |
| HSV-TK + GCV | NCT00005025 | Phase 2 | 2003–2013 | |
| CD + 5-FC | NCT02576665 | Phase 1 | 2015–2018 | |
|
| Inserting the | NCT00003450 | Phase 1 | 2003–2009 |
| Inserting the | NCT00003588 | Phase 1 | 2004–2013 | |
| Inserting the | NCT00003880 | Phase 2 | 2004–2015 | |
| Inserting the | NCT02435186 | Phase 2 | 2015–2015 | |
|
| LOAd703 (an oncolytic adenovirus serotype 5/35 encoding immunostimulatory transgenes: TMZ-CD40L and 41BBL) + chemotherapy or gemcitabine | NCT03225989 | Phase 1 | 2017–2018 |
| Recombinant carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)-expressing measles virus (MV-CEA) and oncolytic measles virus encoding thyroidal sodium iodide symporter (MV-NIS) | NCT00408590 | Phase 1 | 2006–2018 | |
| Vesicular Stomatitis Virus expressing Human Interferon Beta and Sodium-Iodide Symporter (VSV-hIFNbeta-NIS) | NCT03120624 | Phase 1 | 2017–2018 | |
|
| EGEN-001 (IL-12 Plasmid Formulated With PEG-PEI-Cholesterol Lipopolymer) + chemotherapy | NCT00473954 | Phase 1 | 2007–2013 |
| EGEN-001 (IL-12 Plasmid Formulated With PEG-PEI-Cholesterol Lipopolymer) | NCT00137865 | Phase 1 | 2005–2013 | |
| GEN-1 (IL-12 Plasmid Formulated With PEG-PEI-Cholesterol Lipopolymer) + chemotherapy (PTX and carboplatin) | NCT02480374 | Phase 1 | 2015–2018 | |
| NYESO-1(C259) transduced autologous T cells | NCT01567891 | Phase 1 | 2012–2018 | |
| TBI-1301 (Autologous T cells engineered to express a T cell receptor (TCR) targeting NY-ESO-1) + cyclophosphamide | NCT02869217 | Phase 1 | 2016–2017 | |
| TBI-1301 (Autologous T cells engineered to express a T cell receptor (TCR) targeting NY-ESO-1) + cyclophosphamide ± fludarabine | NCT02366546 | Phase 1 | 2015–2017 | |
| Autologous T cells engineered to express a T cell receptor (TCR) targeting NY-ESO-1 + cyclophosphamide + fludarabine | NCT02457650 | Phase 1 | 2015–2016 | |
| TBI-1201 (MAGE-A4-specific | NCT02096614 | Phase 1 | 2014–2017 | |
| Gen modified lymphocytes with | NCT00019136 | Phase 1 | 2003–2015 | |
| TCR-Transduced PBL (T-Cells Genetically Engineered to Express T-Cell Receptors Reactive Against Mutated Neoantigens) | NCT03412877 | Phase 2 | 2018–2018 | |
| Anti-mesothelin CAR transduced PBL (retroviral vector that contains a chimeric T cell receptor (CAR) that recognizes mesothelin) + cyclophosphamide, fludarabine and aldesleukin | NCT01583686 | Phase 1 | 2012–2018 | |
| Anti-hCD70 CAR PBL (Transducing PBL with a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) that engages CD70) + cyclophosphamide, fludarabine and aldesleukin | NCT02830724 | Phase 1 | 2016–2018 | |
| ZYC300 (vaccine which encodes the cytochrome P450 family member, CYP1B1, a known human tumor-associated antigen) + cyclophosphamide | NCT00381173 | Phase 1 | 2006–2013 | |
| Vigil (vaccine composed of autologous tumor cells which are transfected extracorporeally with a plasmid encoding for the gene for | NCT03073525 | Phase 2 | 2017–2018 | |
| ALVAC(2)-NY-ESO-1 (M)/TRICOM vaccine + IDO1 inhibitor | NCT01982487 | Phase 1 | 2013–2013 | |
| ALVAC(2)-NY-ESO-1 (M)/TRICOM vaccine + sirolimus + GM-CSF | NCT01536054 | Phase 1 | 2012–2018 | |
| ALVAC(2)-NY-ESO-1 (M)/TRICOM vaccine + sargramostim | NCT00803569 | Phase 1 | 2008–2011 | |
| atezolizumab ± guadecitabine ± CDX-1401 vaccine (a vaccine composed of a human mAb specific for DEC-205 fused to the full-length tumor antigen NY-ESO-1) | NCT03206047 | Phase 1 | 2017–2018 | |
| p53MVA vaccine (modified vaccinia virus ankara vaccine expressing tumor protein p53) + gemcitabine hydrochloride | NCT02275039 | Phase 1 | 2014–2018 | |
| p53MVA vaccine + Pembrolizumab | NCT03113487 | Phase 2 | 2017–2018 | |
| p53 peptide vaccine + ISA-51 + IL-2 ± GM-CSF | NCT00001827 | Phase 2 | 1999–2017 |