| Literature DB >> 30486519 |
Javed Mahmood1, Hem D Shukla2, Sandrine Soman3, Santanu Samanta4, Prerna Singh5, Shriya Kamlapurkar6, Ali Saeed7, Neha P Amin8, Zeljko Vujaskovic9,10.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer (PC) has the highest mortality rate amongst all other cancers in both men and women, with a one-year relative survival rate of 20%, and a five-year relative survival rate of 8% for all stages of PC combined. The Whipple procedure, or pancreaticoduodenectomy, can increase survival for patients with resectable PC, however, less than 20% of patients are candidates for surgery at time of presentation. Most of the patients are diagnosed with advanced PC, often with regional and distant metastasis. In these advanced cases, chemotherapy and radiation have shown limited tumor control, and PC continues to be refractory to treatment and results in a poor survival outcome. In recent years, there has been intensive research on checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy for PC, however, PC is characterized with dense stromal tissue and a tumor microenvironment (TME) that is highly immunosuppressive, which makes immunotherapy less effective. Interestingly, when immunotherapy is combined with radiation therapy (RT) and loco-regional hyperthermia (HT), it has demonstrated enhanced tumor responses. HT improves tumor killing via a variety of mechanisms, targeting both the tumor and the TME. Targeted HT raises the temperature of the tumor and surrounding tissues to 42⁻43 °C and makes the tumor more immunoresponsive. HT can also modulate the immune system of the TME by inducing and synthesizing heat shock proteins (HSP), which also activate an anti-tumor response. It is well known that HT can enhance RT-induced DNA damage in cancer cells and simultaneously help to oxygenate hypoxic regions. Thus, it is envisaged that combined HT and RT might have immunomodulatory effects in the PC-TME, making PC more responsive to immunotherapies. Moreover, the combined tripartite approach of immunotherapy, RT, and HT could reduce the overall toxicity associated with each individual therapy, while concomitantly enhancing the immunotherapeutic effect of overall individual therapies to treat local and metastatic PC. Thus, the use of a tripartite combinatorial approach could be promising and more efficacious than monotherapy or dual therapy to treat and increase the survival of the PC patients.Entities:
Keywords: immunotherapy; metastasis; pancreatic cancer; radiation therapy; targeted hyperthermia; tripartite; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30486519 PMCID: PMC6316720 DOI: 10.3390/cancers10120469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Integrated workflow of hyperthermia and its impact in activation of the immune response and inhibition of cancer cell DNA repair. Extra Cellular Matrix (ECM); Heat Shock Protein (HSP).
Pancreatic Cancer Clinical Trials with Hyperthermia.
| Trials | Control Arm | Experimental Arm | Type of Hyperthermia |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01077427 Phase III | Adjuvant Gemcitabine and Capecitabine | Adjuvant Gemcitabine Cisplatin and regional hyperthermia | Regional hyperthermia |
| NCT02439593 Phase II | Chemo radiotherapy | Thermo chemo radiotherapy | Regional hyperthermia |
| NCT03251365 Phase II and III | Adjuvant chemotherapy Gemcitabine | HIPEC gemcitabine | Hyperthermic intraabdominal chemotherapy |
| NCT02862015 Phase II | Folfirinox or gemcitabine-based chemotherapy | Oncothermia | Whole body hyperthermia |
| NCT02973217 | Standard chemotherapy | Specific form of thermotherapy—Immuno Stimulating interstitial laser thermotherapy | Thermotherapy |
Note: Pancreatic cancer clinical trials employing hyperthermia with other modalities (radiation/chemotherapy/immunotherapy).
Pancreatic Cancer Clinical Trials with Immunotherapy combined with RT and Chemotherapy.
| Trials | Control Arm | Experimental Arm | Immunotherapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02405585 Phase II | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by SBRT with Gemcitabine in borderline resectable pancreatic cancer | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy with Immunotherapy Algenpantucel-L | Algenpantucel-L |
| NCT01959672 Phase II | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (gemcitabine, leucovorin, 5FU) followed by SBRT with Nelfinavir | Add Oregovomab with chemotherapy | Oregovomab (Chin) |
| NCT01072981 Phase III | Post-Surgery, adjuvant Gemcitabine, or 5FU chemo radiation | Post-Surgery, adjuvant Gemcitabine, or 5FU chemo radiation with Algenpantucel-L | Algenpantucel-L |
| NCT01903083 Phase I | No control | Chemo immunotherapy followed by assessment for surgery | Tadalafil |
| NCT02648282 Phase II | Chemotherapy with radiation therapy | GVAX vaccine and Pembrolizumab along with chemo radiation therapy | GVAX and Pembrolizumab |
| NCT03104439 Phase II | Radiation therapy | Nivolumab and Ipilimumab with radiation therapy | Nivolumab and Ipilimumab |
| NCT02305186 Phase II | Neoadjuvant chemoradiation | Neoadjuvant chemoradiation with Pembrolizumab | Pembrolizumab |
| NCT01342224 Phase I | No control | Vaccination with chemotherapy followed by radiation therapy | Tadalafil and Vaccination |
Note: Ongoing or prior pancreatic cancer clinical trials employing immunotherapy with other modalities (radiation/chemotherapy therapy). SBRT: Stereotactic body radiation therapy, 5FU: Fluorouracil, GVAX: granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) gene-transfected tumor cell vaccine.
Figure 2Schematic representation of tripartite modality combining hyperthermia with radiation and immunotherapy and their combined additive effect against cancer cells in the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). NK cells: Natural Killer Cells.