| Literature DB >> 30894861 |
Valeria Mollica Poeta1,2, Matteo Massara1, Arianna Capucetti1,2, Raffaella Bonecchi1,2.
Abstract
Immunotherapy is a clinically validated treatment for many cancers to boost the immune system against tumor growth and dissemination. Several strategies are used to harness immune cells: monoclonal antibodies against tumor antigens, immune checkpoint inhibitors, vaccination, adoptive cell therapies (e.g., CAR-T cells) and cytokine administration. In the last decades, it is emerging that the chemokine system represents a potential target for immunotherapy. Chemokines, a large family of cytokines with chemotactic activity, and their cognate receptors are expressed by both cancer and stromal cells. Their altered expression in malignancies dictates leukocyte recruitment and activation, angiogenesis, cancer cell proliferation, and metastasis in all the stages of the disease. Here, we review first attempts to inhibit the chemokine system in cancer as a monotherapy or in combination with canonical or immuno-mediated therapies. We also provide recent findings about the role in cancer of atypical chemokine receptors that could become future targets for immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: atypical chemokine receptor; cancer related inflammation; chemokine; chemokine receptor; immunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30894861 PMCID: PMC6414456 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Chemokine and chemokine receptor inhibitors in preclinical models and clinical trials.
| CCR1 | CCX721 | Multiple myeloma | ( | |||
| BL5923 | Colon cancer liver metastasis | ( | ||||
| CCX9588 + anti-PD-L1 | Breast cancer | ( | ||||
| CCR2 | PF-04136309 + GEM | Pancreatic cancer | ( | PF-04136309+nab- PTX+GEM | Pancreatic cancer | NCT02732938; ( |
| CCX872 + anti-PD-1 | Pancreatic cancer | ( | PF-04136309 + FX | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | NCT01413022; ( | |
| RDC018 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | ( | CCX872 +FX | Pancreatic cancer | NCT02345408; ( | |
| 747 + Sorafenib | Hepatocellular carcinoma | ( | ||||
| iCCR2 | Ovarian cancer | ( | ||||
| CCL2 | CNTO 888 + radiotherapy | Breast cancer | ( | CNTO 888 | Solid tumors | NCT00537368 |
| CNTO 888 | Metastatic prostate cancer | NCT00992186; ( | ||||
| CCR4 | Anti-CCR4 CAR-T cells | T cell malignancies | ( | Mogamulizumab | Relapsed/refractory | |
| Affi 5 | Renal tumor | ( | ATL | ( | ||
| AF399/420/1802 | Melanoma, lung tumor and CRC | ( | Mogamulizumab | CTL | NCT01728805; ( | |
| CCR5 | Maraviroc | CRC | ( | Maraviroc + chemotherapy | CRC | NCT01736813; ( |
| CCR7 | siRNA | Metastatic CRC and prostate cancer | ( | |||
| MSM R707 | Metastatic T- ALL | ( | ||||
| CXCR2 | Cxcr2−/−+ PTX | Breast cancer | ( | AZD5069 | Pancreatic cancer | NCT02583477 |
| Navarixin + anti-MEK | Melanoma | ( | Reparixin + PTX | Breast cancer | NCT02370238; ( | |
| SB225002 + Sorafenib | Ovarian cancer | ( | ||||
| Reparixin + 5-fluorouracil | Human gastric cancer | ( | ||||
| Cxcr2−/− | Pancreatic cancer | ( | ||||
| Cxcr2−/−+ anti-PD-1 | Pancreatic cancer | ( | ||||
| SB225002+RS504393+FX | Pancreatic cancer | ( | ||||
| SB265610 + Docetaxel | Prostate cancer | ( | ||||
| CXCR4 | AMD3100 + Ara-C | AML | ( | AMD3100 | Relapsed AML | NCT00512252; ( |
| LY2510924 | AML | ( | LY2510924 | CRC, lung, breast, prostate cancer | NCT02737072; ( | |
| BKT140 + Rituximab | NHL | ( | BMS-936564 | AML | NCT01120457; ( | |
| AMD3465 | GBM and Medulloblastoma | ( | PF-06747143 | Hematologic malignancies | NCT02954653 | |
| POL5551 + anti-VEGF | GBM | ( | USL311 + Lomustine | Solid tumors and GBM | NCT02765165 | |
| AMD3100 | Ovarian cancer | ( | Balixafortide + Eribulin | HER2− metastatic | NCT01837095; ( | |
| AMD3100 + anti-PD-L1 | Pancreatic cancer | ( | AMD3100 | Recurrent GBM | NCI2012-00149; | |
| AMD3100 + VIC-008 | Mesothelioma | ( | NCI2013-02012 | |||
| PRX177561+Bevacizumab+ | GBM | ( | ||||
| ACKR2 | Ackr2 −/− | Metastatic breast cancer and melanoma | ( | |||
| ACKR3 | X7Ab + Temozolomide | GBM | ( | |||
Figure 1Chemokine receptor inhibitors in cancer. Inhibitors of CC- and CXC-chemokine receptors tested in different tumor types in preclinical models and clinical trials (*). GEM, Gemcitabine; PTX, Paclitaxel; FX, FOLFIRINOX.