| Literature DB >> 30108584 |
Reza Elahi1, Elnaz Khosh1, Safa Tahmasebi2, Abdolreza Esmaeilzadeh3,4.
Abstract
T cells equipped with chimeric antigen receptors (CAR T cells) have recently provided promising advances as a novel immunotherapeutic approach for cancer treatment. CAR T cell therapy has shown stunning results especially in B-cell malignancies; however, it has shown less success against solid tumors, which is more supposed to be related to the specific characteristics of the tumor microenvironment. In this review, we discuss the structure of the CAR, current clinical advantages from finished and ongoing trials, adverse effects, challenges and controversies, new engineering methods of CAR, and clinical considerations that are associated with CAR T cell therapy both in hematological malignancies and solid tumors. Also, we provide a comprehensive description of recently introduced modifications for designing smarter models of CAR T cells. Specific hurdles and problems that limit the optimal function of CAR T cells, especially on solid tumors, and possible solutions according to new modifications and generations of CAR T cells have been introduced here. We also provide information of the future directions on how to enhance engineering the next smarter generations of CAR T cells in order to decrease the adverse effects and increase the potency and efficacy of CAR T cells against cancer.Entities:
Keywords: adoptive cell therapy; challenges; chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy; clinical applications; immune cell hacking; immunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30108584 PMCID: PMC6080612 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Structure of the four generations of chimeric antigen receptors. Created by Esmaeilzadeh et al.
Characteristics and limitations of each vector utilized for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) transgene transduction.
| Vector | Special properties | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Gammaretroviral | Integration into the cell genome ( | Insertional oncogenesis ( |
| High expense and cost ( | ||
| Permanent expression of the gene ( | Affecting active dividing cells ( | |
| Availability of multiple packaging systems ( | Decrease in expression of CAR after a while ( | |
| Restricted cargo capability ( | ||
| Lentiviral | Affecting non-dividing cells | Missing extensive accessible vector packing systems ( |
| Improved cargo capability ( | Diverse lot-to-lot features ( | |
| Decreased chance of insertional oncogenesis ( | ||
| Transposon | Stable integration to cell genome ( | Low efficacy ( |
| DNA plasmid | Lower cost ( | Reduced efficacy ( |
| Low immunogenicity ( | Decreased genome integration ( | |
| Decreased risk of insertional oncogenesis ( | Early exhaustion of T cells ( | |
| Limited persistence and expansion of engineered cells ( | ||
| Messenger RNA | Transient expression of the transgene (1 week) ( | No integration of the transgene into the cell genome ( |
Figure 2The procedure of autologous chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell production. Created by Esmaeilzadeh et al.
Figure 3Geographical distribution of ongoing chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy clinical trials for cancer. USA and China hold most of the trials; however, other countries have also considered holding trials. Created by Esmaeilzadeh et al.
Information of ongoing clinical trials registered in clinicaltrials.gov.
| Target antigen | Disease | Phase | Clinical trial identifier code* |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD19 | Leukemia | 1 or 2 | NCT02975687, |
| Lymphoma | 1 or 2 | NCT03029338, | |
| Lymphoma and leukemia | 1 or 2 | NCT02819583, | |
| CD20 | Leukemia and lymphoma | 1 or 2 | NCT02710149 |
| Lymphoma | 2 | NCT03277729, | |
| CD19 and CD20 | Leukemia and lymphoma | 1 | NCT03097770, |
| Lymphoma | 1 or 2 | NCT03207178 | |
| CD22 | Leukemia and lymphoma | 2 | NCT02935153 |
| Lymphoma | 1 | NCT03244306 | |
| CD19 and CD22 | Leukemia and lymphoma | 1 or 2 | NCT03233854, |
| CD30 | Lymphoma | 1 | NCT03383965, |
| BCMA | Multiple myeloma | 1 or 2 | NCT03287804, |
| CD123 | AML | 1 | NCT03114670 |
| BPDCN | 1 | NCT03203369 | |
| CD33 | Leukemia and lymphoma | 1 | NCT03126864 |
| Ig k | Lymphoma | 1 | NCT00881920 |
| Myeloma | |||
| Leukemia | |||
| ROR1 | Breast | 1 | NCT02706392 |
| Lung | |||
| Acute lymphoblastic leukemia | |||
| Chronic lymphoblastic leukemia | |||
| Lymphoma | |||
| EGFR | Sarcoma | 1 | NCT00902044 |
| Glioblastoma | 1 | NCT02442297 | |
| Glioblastoma multiform (GBM) | 1 | NCT02844062 | |
| Recurrent GBM | 1 | NCT03283631 | |
| Recurrent brain tumors | |||
| EGFR-positive colorectal cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT03152435 | |
| Advanced solid tumor | 1 or 2 | NCT03182816 | |
| Advanced solid tumor | 1 or 2 | NCT02873390 | |
| EGFRvIII | Glioblastoma | 1 | NCT02664363 |
| GBM | 1 | NCT02844062 | |
| Malignant glioma | 1 or 2 | NCT01454596 | |
| Brain cancer | |||
| Pancreatic cancer | 1 | NCT03267173 | |
| HER2 | HER2 positive cancers | 1 or 2 | NCT02713984 |
| Glioblastoma | 1 | NCT02442297 | |
| Sarcoma | 1 | NCT00902044 | |
| Mesothelin | Advanced solid tumor | 1 or 2 | NCT03182803 |
| Mesothelin positive tumors | 1 | NCT02930993 | |
| Advanced solid tumor | 1 or 2 | NCT03030001 | |
| Pancreatic cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT01583686 | |
| Cervical cancer | |||
| Ovarian cancer | |||
| Mesothelioma | |||
| Lung cancer | |||
| Cervical cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT03356795 | |
| Pancreatic cancer | 1 | NCT03323944 | |
| Malignant pleural disease | 1 | NCT02414269 | |
| Breast cancer | |||
| Lung cancer | |||
| Mesothelioma | |||
| Pancreatic cancer | 1 | NCT02706782 | |
| Breast cancer | 1 | NCT02792114 | |
| Hepatocellular | 1 or 2 | NCT02959151 | |
| Pancreatic cancer metastatic | |||
| Colorectal cancer metastatic | |||
| PSMA | Cervical cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT03356795 |
| Urothelial bladder carcinoma | 1 or 2 | NCT03185468 | |
| Bladder cancer | |||
| Prostate cancer | 1 | NCT03089203 | |
| CD70 | Pancreatic cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT02830724 |
| Breast cancer | |||
| Ovarian cancer | |||
| Renal cell cancer | |||
| Melanoma | |||
| MUC1 | Lung cancer | 1 | NCT03198052 |
| Non-small cell lung cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT02587689 | |
| Triple-negative invasive breast carcinoma | |||
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | |||
| Pancreatic carcinoma | |||
| Advanced solid tumor | 1 or 2 | NCT03179007 | |
| Gastric carcinoma | 1 or 2 | NCT02617134 | |
| Colorectal carcinoma | |||
| Malignant glioma of brain | |||
| Lung cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT03356808 | |
| Cervical cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT03356795 | |
| Sarcoma | 1 or 2 | NCT03356782 | |
| Osteoid sarcoma | |||
| Ewing sarcoma | |||
| Pancreatic cancer | 1 | NCT03267173 | |
| GD2 | Neuroblastoma | 1 or 2 | NCT03373097 |
| Neuroblastoma | 1 or 2 | NCT02765243 | |
| Cervical cancer | 1 or 2 | NCT03356795 | |
| Relapsed or refractory neuroblastoma | 1 | NCT02761915 | |
| CEA | Colorectal cancer | 1 | NCT02349724 |
| Breast cancer | |||
| Lung cancer | |||
| Pancreatic cancer | |||
| Gastric cancer | |||
| GPC3 | Lung squamous cell carcinoma | 1 | NCT02876978 |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 1 | NCT03198546 | |
| Squamous cell lung cancer | |||
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | – | NCT03146234 | |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 1 or 2 | NCT03130712 | |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 1 or 2 | NCT02715362 | |
| MET | Malignant melanoma | 1 | NCT03060356 |
| Breast cancer | |||
| PD-L1 | Non-small cell lung cancer | 1 | NCT03060343 |
| Advanced lung cancer | 1 | NCT03330834 | |
| Lung cancer | 1 | NCT03198052 | |
BMCA, B-cell maturation antigen; Ig, immunoglobin; ROR1, receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor; MUC, mucin; EGFRvIII, EGFR variant III; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; HER2, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2; GPC3, glypican 3; CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; PSMA, prostate-specific membrane antigen; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; PD-1, programmed death-1.
*Data of ongoing clinical trials are confirmed by .
A comparison of obstacles and feasible solutions of applying chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in solid tumors and hematological malignancies.
| Challenges in solid tumors | Feasible solutions | Challenges in hematological malignancies | Feasible solutions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trafficking to the solid tumor site | Local infusion of CAR T cells ( | Antigen escape | Targeting two antigens (such as CD19/CD20) |
| Pro-inflammatory chemokine production by CAR T cells ( | |||
| Engineering tumor site-specific CAR T cells (e.g., hypoxia-inducible factor sensitized and epidermal growth factor receptor sensitized CARs) ( | |||
| Engineering CAR T cells with chemokine receptors (CXCR2, CCR4) ( | |||
| The immunosuppressive microenvironment of the malignant tumor: cytokines, immune inhibitory checkpoints, and immune cells | Reduction and inhibition of regulatory T cells by lymphodepletion ( | B-cell aplasia and multiple infections after infusion | Intravenous immunoglobulin injection ( |
| Employment of exogenous interleukin (IL)-2, IL-7, and IL-12 for enhancing CAR T cell efficacy ( | Dual CD19-Dectin-1 CAR T cells ( | ||
| Programmed death 1 (PD-1) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 blockade by monoclonal antibody ( | |||
| Administering clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated 9 for engineering PD-1-knockout CAR T cells ( | |||
| Designing other inhibitory-molecule knockout CAR T cells | |||
| Target antigen heterogenicity and specificity | Dual CARs targeting two antigens simultaneously ( | Reduced number of CAR T cells in patient’s blood | Multiple infusions of CAR T product ( |
| Identifying more tumor-specific antigens proprietary for solid tumor | |||
| Administrating glycan-CARs to increase the tumor-specificity of CAR ( | |||
| Indication of specific CARs for patients with particular antigen expression profile | |||
| Identifying new tumor-unique antigens | |||
| Controlling side effects | Engineering smarter CAR T cells [e.g., inhibitory CARs (iCARs), “on-off switch” CARs, split CARs] ( | Severe acute side effects | iCARs ( |
| Predicting cytokine release syndrome (CRS) | Predicting CRS | ||
| Administration of anti-IL6 (Tocilizumab) and hydration methods in case of severe toxicity ( | Administration of anti-IL6 (Tocilizumab) and hydration methods in case of severe toxicity ( | ||
| Transient expression of CAR ( | |||
| Limited | Selecting appropriate T cell subgroups | ||
| Simultaneous infusion of T cell stimulating cytokines (IL-12, IL-15, and IL-18) ( | |||
| Penetration to the solid tumor stroma | Anti-fibroblast-associated protein-CAR T cells ( | ||
| Heparanase expressing CAR T cells (HPSE-CAR) ( | |||