| Literature DB >> 30090763 |
Sebastian Kobold1, Stanislav Pantelyushin2, Felicitas Rataj1, Johannes Vom Berg2.
Abstract
T cells have been established as core effectors for cancer therapy; this has moved the focus of therapeutic endeavors to effectively enhance or restore T cell tumoricidal activity rather than directly target cancer cells. Both antibodies targeting the checkpoint inhibitory molecules programmed death receptor 1 (PD1), PD-ligand 1 (PD-L1) and cytotoxic lymphocyte activated antigen 4 (CTLA4), as well as bispecific antibodies targeting CD3 and CD19 are now part of the standard of care. In particular, antibodies to checkpoint molecules have gained broad approval in a number of solid tumor indications, such as melanoma or non-small cell lung cancer based on their unparalleled efficacy. In contrast, the efficacy of bispecific antibody-derivatives is much more limited and evidence is emerging that their activity is regulated through diverse checkpoint molecules. In either case, both types of compounds have their limitations and most patients will not benefit from them in the long run. A major aspect under investigation is the lack of baseline antigen-specific T cells in certain patient groups, which is thought to render responses to checkpoint inhibition less likely. On the other hand, bispecific antibodies are also restricted by induced T cell anergy. Based on these considerations, combination of bispecific antibody mediated on-target T cell activation and reversal of anergy bears high promise. Here, we will review current evidence for such combinatorial approaches, as well as ongoing clinical investigations in this area. We will also discuss potential evidence-driven future avenues for testing.Entities:
Keywords: anergy; anti-CTLA4; anti-PD1; bispecific T cell activating antibodies; cancer immunotherapy; combination therapy; immune checkpoint blockade
Year: 2018 PMID: 30090763 PMCID: PMC6068270 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1(A) Therapeutic concept utilized by TABs: Binding of tumor associated antigen (TAA) on cancer cell leads to crosslinking of CD3 on T cells, activation irrespective of TCR specificity and tumor cell lysis. (B) Molecular formats of TABs which are approved or currently tested in combination with checkpoint blockade. (i) Bispecific rat/mouse chimeric, quadroma derived antibodies with 1:1 valency, e.g., Catumaxomab. (ii) BiTE: two single chain variable fragments (scFv) connected via flexible linkers as a continous polypeptide with 1:1 valency, e.g., Blinatumomab. (iii) DART-Fc: two VL chains that each have their corresponding VH chains interchanged and are expressed as two separate chains. One of the chains has a knob-Fc domain, a third chain entails the whole-Fc domain, 1:1 valency, such as MGD007. (iv) CrossMAB-Fab: heterodimeric constant light chain assembly combined with knobs-into-holes mutations for heterodimeric heavy chain pairing with 1:2 valency, e.g., CEA-TCB. (v) Bispecific fully human IgG format (hIgG) with a common light chain and heterodimeric heavy chains with 1:1 valency, e.g., REGN1979.
Figure 2Strategies to overcome tumor escape mechanisms through combining TABs with checkpoint blockade. (A) Activated T cells upregulate checkpoint molecules such as PD1 and CTLA4, which can lead to their suppression and anergy, allowing tumors to escape. Combination therapy of TABs with checkpoint blockers unleashes suppressed T cells and restores tumor cell killing via TAB. This in turn releases new tumor antigens. (B) Tumor antigens are taken up by antigen presenting cells (APCs) and prime new T cell clones, this broadens the antigen specific T cell response and leads to tumor eradication through antigen spreading even if the tumor downregulates TAB specific TAA.
Clinical trials testing TAB in combination with checkpoint blocking antibodies Tested compounds, molecular targets, format, indication and trial status are indicated.
| Blinatumomab and Pembrolizumab | CD19 and PD1 | BiTE | Refractory or relapsed diffuse large B cell lymphoma | NCT03340766 | Not yet recruiting |
| Blinatumomab, Nivolumab, Ipilimumab | CD19, PD1, CTLA4 | BiTE | Refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia | NCT02879695 | Recruiting |
| Anti-CEA x anti-CD3 bispecific antibody and atezolizumab | CEA and PD-L1 | CrossMAB-Fab | Advanced CEA+ solid tumors | NCT02650713 | Recruiting |
| Anti-PD1 and anti-CD3 x anti-CD20 antibodies | CD20 and PD1 | cLC-hetero-H-chain IgG | B lymphoid malignancies | NCT02651662 | Recruiting |
| Anti-PD1 and anti-CD3 x anti-gpA33 | gpA33 and PD1 | DART-Fc | Refractory or metastastic colorectal cancer | NCT03531632 | Recruiting |
A comprehensive overview of clinical trials using TAB alone or in combination with other than checkpoint inhibition is found elsewhere (.