| Literature DB >> 30081947 |
Neil S Forbes1, Robert S Coffin2, Liang Deng3, Laura Evgin4, Steve Fiering5, Matthew Giacalone6, Claudia Gravekamp7, James L Gulley8, Hal Gunn9, Robert M Hoffman10,11, Balveen Kaur12, Ke Liu13, Herbert Kim Lyerly14, Ariel E Marciscano8, Eddie Moradian15, Sheryl Ruppel16, Daniel A Saltzman17, Peter J Tattersall18, Steve Thorne19, Richard G Vile4, Halle Huihong Zhang20, Shibin Zhou21, Grant McFadden22.
Abstract
In this White Paper, we discuss the current state of microbial cancer therapy. This paper resulted from a meeting ('Microbial Based Cancer Therapy') at the US National Cancer Institute in the summer of 2017. Here, we define 'Microbial Therapy' to include both oncolytic viral therapy and bacterial anticancer therapy. Both of these fields exploit tumor-specific infectious microbes to treat cancer, have similar mechanisms of action, and are facing similar challenges to commercialization. We designed this paper to nucleate this growing field of microbial therapeutics and increase interactions between researchers in it and related fields. The authors of this paper include many primary researchers in this field. In this paper, we discuss the potential, status and opportunities for microbial therapy as well as strategies attempted to date and important questions that need to be addressed. The main areas that we think will have the greatest impact are immune stimulation, control of efficacy, control of delivery, and safety. There is much excitement about the potential of this field to treat currently intractable cancer. Much of the potential exists because these therapies utilize unique mechanisms of action, difficult to achieve with other biological or small molecule drugs. By better understanding and controlling these mechanisms, we will create new therapies that will become integral components of cancer care.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30081947 PMCID: PMC6091193 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0381-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Examples of recent trials for non-replicating-virus-mediated cancer gene therapy
| Biological Agent | Virus (gene) | NCT# | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| AAV2hAQP1 | AAV (Aquaporin-1) | NCT02446249 | Squamous cell Head and Neck cancer |
| NP2 | HSV-1 (NP2) | NCT00804076 | Cancer pain |
| Ad5CMV-p53 | Adenovirus (p53) | NCT00003147 | Liver cancer |
| TK99UN | Adenovirus (HSV TK) | NCT00844623 | Hepatocellular carcinoma |
Examples of active studies with oncolytic viruses
| Biological Agent | Virus | NCT# | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| TG6002 | Vaccinia virus | NCT03294486 | Glioblastoma |
| ADV/HSV-tk | Adenovirus | NCT03004183 | NSCLC and triple-negative Breast Cancer |
| Pexa-Vec | Vaccinia | NCT03206073 | Colorectal |
| LOAd703 | Adenovirus | NCT02705196 | Pancreatic Cancer |
| CG0070 | Adenovirus | NCT02365818 | Bladder cancer |
| MV-NIS | Measles | NCT00408590 | Ovarian cancer |
| HF-10 | HSV-1 | NCT03252808 | Melanoma |
| GL-ONC1 | Vaccinia virus | NCT02714374 | Solid Tumors |
| VCN-01 | Adenovirus | NCT02045602 | Advanced Solid Tumors |
| Ad-MAGEA3 | Adenovirus | NCT02879760 | NSCLC |
| OBP-301 | Adenovirus | NCT03190824 | Unresectable Metastatic Melanoma |
| G207 | HSV-1 | NCT02457845 | Pediatric Brain Tumors |
Abbreviations: NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer
Bacterial genera investigated as anti-cancer therapeutics
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Examples of active clinical studies with bacteria
| Biological Agent | Bacterium | NCT# | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-2 | Salmonella | NCT01099631 | Liver Cancer |
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| Clostridium | NCT00358397 | Solid Tumors |
| APS001F | Bifidobacterium | NCT01562626 | Solid Tumors |
| JNJ-64041757 | Listeria | NCT02592967 | NSCLC |
| JNJ-757 | Listeria | NCT03371381 | Lung Cancer |
| pLADD | Listeria | NCT03189030 | Metastatic Colorectal Cancer |
| ADU-623 | Listeria | NCT01967758 | Astrocytic Tumors |
| ADXS11-001 | Listeria | NCT01598792 | Oropharyngeal Cancer |
| CRS-207 | Listeria | NCT01675765 | Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma |
| GVAX & CRS-207 | Listeria/GVAX | NCT02004262 | Pancreatic Cancer |
In these clinical trials, Listeria do not colonize the tumor microenvironment
Examples of translational research support at NIH
| Program | Mission/Objective | Website link |
|---|---|---|
| NCI: Experimental Therapeutics (NExT) Program | Supports promising new anticancer-drug (small molecule, biologics) discovery and development projects towards clinical evaluation and registration. | https://next.cancer.gov/ |
| NCI: Division of Cancer Prevention (PREVENT) | Supports development in cancer prevention intervention and biomarkers. | https://prevention.cancer.gov/major-programs/prevent-cancerpreclinical |
| NCATS: Bridging Interventional Development Gaps (BrIDGs) Program | Advances promising therapeutic agents for both common and rare diseases through late-stage preclinical development toward an IND application. | https://ncats.nih.gov/bridgs |
| NCATS: Therapeutics for Rare and Neglected Diseases (TRND) Program | Supports preclinical development of therapeutic drugs to treat rare and neglected disorders toward the goal of an IND application. | https://ncats.nih.gov/trnd |
| NIAID: Translation Resource Tools | Supports preclinical and clinical research for vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics. | https://www.niaid.nih.gov/research/therapeutic-developmentservices |
| NINDS: Create Bio Program | Supports optimization of biotechnology product and biologics-based therapies for development and IND-enabling studies, as well as early-phase clinical trials. | https://www.ninds.nih.gov/Current-Research/Research-Funded-NINDS/Translational-Research/CREATE-BIO |
| NHLBI: SMARTT Program | Accelerates translation of research for therapeutic candidates or diagnostic imaging agents from in vivo efficacy to IND submission for treatment of heart, lung, or blood diseases. | https://www.nhlbismartt.org/ |