| Literature DB >> 30559743 |
Anne Huber1, Floris Dammeijer1,2, Joachim G J V Aerts1,2, Heleen Vroman1,2.
Abstract
Dendritic cell (DC) based cancer immunotherapy aims at the activation of the immune system, and in particular tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) to eradicate the tumor. DCs represent a heterogeneous cell population, including conventional DCs (cDCs), consisting of cDC1s, cDC2s, plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs), and monocyte-derived DCs (moDCs). These DC subsets differ both in ontogeny and functional properties, such as the capacity to induce CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell activation. MoDCs are most frequently used for vaccination purposes, based on technical aspects such as availability and in vitro expansion. However, whether moDCs are superior over other DC subsets in inducing anti-tumor immune responses, is unknown, and likely depends on tumor type and composition of the tumor microenvironment. In this review, we discuss cellular aspects essential for DC vaccination efficacy, and the most recent findings on different DC subsets that could be used for DC-based cancer immunotherapy. This can prove valuable for the future design of more effective DC vaccines by choosing different DC subsets, and sheds light on the working mechanism of DC immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: DC subsets; Immunotherapy; T cell responses; dendritic cell (DC); tumor immunology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30559743 PMCID: PMC6287551 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Clinical trials employing different DC subsets and different sources of antigens.
| moDC | Autologous lysate | 10 | Epithelial MPM | Three vaccinations i.d. (1/3) and i.v. (2/3) in at 0, 2 and 4 weeks | CT scans and chest X-rays analyzed with modified RECIST: PRs ( | ( |
| moDC | Allogeneic tumor cell lysate | 9 | MPM | Three biweekly vaccinations i.d. (1/3) and i.v. (2/3), followed by a boost at 3 and 6 months | CT scans analyzed with modified RECIST: PR ( | ( |
| moDC | Allogeneic tumor cell lysate | 27 | Prostate cancer | Twelve vaccinations s.c. at the axillary and inguinal areas; patients received 1 week of cyclophosphamide in metronomic setting prior to vaccinations | Increase of median PSADT from 5.67 (prior treatment) to 18.85 months (after treatment) | ( |
| moDC | 2 TAAs | 15 | NSCLC | Three vaccinations i.v. in 1-week intervals | Long-term follow-up until 2017: low dose group: no recurrence, progressive disease and death ( | ( |
| moDC | 3 TAAs | 156 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Six injections s.c. near the inguinal lymph nodes over 14 weeks | Difference in RFS not statistically significant between treated and control groups; Significantly prolonged RFS in the treated non-radiofrequency ablation subgroup | ( |
| moDC | TAA-mRNA | 30 | AML (in remission) | I.d. injections four times at 2-week intervals | Antileukemic effect ( | ( |
| moDC | 4 HLA class I and 6 HLA class II peptides | 53 | Metastatic melanoma | Four vaccinations (at week 0, 2, 6, 10) followed after 2 months by 6 vaccination maintenance cycles for up to 2 years | No regression of all metastases according to WHO criteria but slow regression of individual metastases; 75% OS at 5 years in group of tumor-free patients; 19% of patients still alive after 12-year follow-up | ( |
| moDC | 6 HER2 MHC class II binding peptides | 42 | HER2+ breast cancer | Six weekly injections into the breast, into the groin LNs, or into both breast and in groin LNs | Higher pathologic complete response rate in ductal carcinoma | ( |
| cDC2s | 3 TAAs | 14 | Metastatic melanoma | Three i.n. injections once every 2 weeks; followed by 2 maintenance cycles of 3 biweekly vaccinations each with a 6-week interval | Long-term PFS of 12-35 months ( | ( |
| pDCs | 3 TAAs | 15 | Metastatic melanoma | Three i.n. injections once every 2 weeks, followed by 2 maintenance cycles of 3 biweekly vaccinations with a 6-week interval | SD ( | ( |
AML, acute myeloid leukemia; cDC2s, conventional DCs 2; CT, computed tomography; i.d, intra-dermal; i.n.,intra-nodal; i.v., intra-venously; moDCs, monocyte-derived DCs; MPM, malignant pleural mesothelioma; NR, no response; NSCLC, non-small cell lung carcinoma; PR, partial response; RECIST, Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors; OS, overall survival; pDCs, plasmacytoid DCs; PFS, progression-free survival; PSADT, prostate-specific antigen doubling time; RFS, recurrence-free survival; SD, stable disease; TAA, tumor-associated antigen; s.c. subcutaneous.
Figure 1Overview of immunological changes observed upon moDC therapy. Vaccination with moDCs can lead to various immunological changes such as an increase in numbers of circulating immune cells (TAA-specific CD8+ T-cells, CD8+ T-cells expressing IFNγ or Granzyme B, CD4+ T-cells, eosinophils), or a decrease of other immune cells (Tregs). In addition, systemic cytolytic lymphocyte (CTL) or natural killer (NK) cell responses, as well as CD4+ T-cell responses in sentinel lymph nodes (LNs) were observed. Levels of TAA-specific IgG antibodies and cytokines (IL-6, IFNγ, TNFα) increased, whereas levels of TGFβ decreased. Vaccination with moDCs also resulted in tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T-cells, increased cytotoxicity of isolated PBMCs (monocytes, CD8+ and CD4+ T-cells, B-cells), and allergic reactions at the DC injection site. Of the shown changes, only increased circulating TAA-specific CD8+ T-cells, eosinophilic blood count, strength of allergic reactions at DC injection site, and a CD4+ T-cell response in sentinel LNs correspond to clinical outcome.