| Literature DB >> 30483476 |
Christopher Chin1, Emma S Lunking1, Macarena de la Fuente2,3, Nagi G Ayad1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) is the most common malignant primary brain tumor. Despite aggressive multimodality treatment it remains one of the most challenging and intractable cancers (1]. While current standard of care treatment for GBM is maximal safe surgical resection, systemic chemotherapy with Temozolimide (TMZ), and radiation therapy, the current prognosis of GBM patients remains poor, with a median overall survival of 12-15 months (2, 3). Therefore, other treatments are needed to provide better outcomes for GBM patients. Immunotherapy is one of the most promising new cancer treatment approaches. Immunotherapy drugs have obtained regulatory approval in a variety of cancers including melanoma (4), Hodgkin lymphoma (5), and non-small cell lung cancer (6). The basis of immunotherapy in cancer treatment is linked to stimulating the immune system to recognize cancer cells as foreign, thereby leading to the eventual elimination of the tumor. One form of immunotherapy utilizes vaccines that target tumor antigens (7), while other approaches utilize T-cells in patients to stimulate them to attack tumor cells (8). Despite intensive efforts all approaches have not been overtly successful (9), suggesting that we need to better understand the underlying biology of tumor cells and their environment as they respond to immunotherapy. Recent studies have elucidated epigenetic pathway regulation of GBM tumor expansion (10), suggesting that combined epigenetic pathway inhibition with immunotherapy may be feasible. In this review, we discuss current GBM clinical trials and how immune system interactions with epigenetic pathways and signaling nodes can be delineated to uncover potential combination therapies for this incurable disease.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trial; epigenetic; glioblastoma; immunotherapeutic; long non coding RNA
Year: 2018 PMID: 30483476 PMCID: PMC6243054 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
A summary of clinical trials utilizing standard of care for GBM in addition to immunotherapy and biomarker immunotherapy in combination with and without targeted therapy.
| Standard of care, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy: immunotherapy combined with other treatment method(s) | Combination of immunization and radiotherapy for recurrent GBM (InSituVac1) (InSituVac1) ( | Tremelimumab and durvalumab in combination or alone in treating patients with recurrent malignant glioma ( |
| Immunotherapy and standard of care: | Immunotherapy for patients with brain stem glioma and glioblastoma ( | A study of ICT-121 dendritic cell vaccine in recurrent glioblastoma ( |
Figure 1Autologous vaccine therapy. Both GBM tumor antigen and white blood cells are extracted from the patient. Subsequently, the extracted white blood cells are cultured with the GBM tumor antigens. A vaccine is created that is specific to each individual GBM patient's tumor antigen and then the cultured white blood cells are reintroduced to the patient.
Figure 2BET inhibitor drugs and HOTAIR level regulation. BRD4 binding to HOTAIR promoter region causes an upregulation in gene expression for the lncRNA HOTAIR. This overexpression in HOTAIR is associated with proliferation and expansion of GBM tumor cells. BET inhibitors prevent binding of BRD4 to the HOTAIR promoter and yield a down regulation in HOTAIR expression. Subsequently, there is prevention of tumor cell proliferation.