| Literature DB >> 30925924 |
Manendra Babu Lankadasari1,2, Pramiti Mukhopadhyay1,3, Sabira Mohammed1,2, Kuzhuvelil B Harikumar4.
Abstract
Among all the deadly cancers, pancreatic cancer ranks seventh in mortality. The absence of any grave symptoms coupled with the unavailability of early prognostic and diagnostic markers make the disease incurable in most of the cases. This leads to a late diagnosis, where the disease would have aggravated and thus, incurable. Only around 20% of the cases present the early disease diagnosis. Surgical resection is the prime option available for curative local disease but in the case of advanced cancer, chemotherapy is the standard treatment modality although the patients end up with drug resistance and severe side effects. Desmoplasia plays a very important role in chemoresistance associated with pancreatic cancer and consists of a thick scar tissue around the tumor comprised of different cell populations. The interplay between this heterogenous population in the tumor microenvironment results in sustained tumor growth and metastasis. Accumulating evidences expose the crucial role played by the tumor-associated macrophages in pancreatic cancer and this review briefly presents the origin from their parent lineage and the importance in maintaining tumor hallmarks. Finally we have tried to address their role in imparting chemoresistance and the therapeutic interventions leading to reduced tumor burden.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trials; Desmoplasia; Immunotherapy; Microenvironment; Pancreatic cancer; Stroma; Tumor-associated macrophages
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30925924 PMCID: PMC6441154 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-019-0966-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1The emergence of M2 macrophages from monocytes. Various signaling molecules like M-CSF, CCL2 etc. and certain pathways like PI3Kγ/PTEN and RBPJ/Notch cascades are involved in M2 differentiation from monocytes. Therapeutic interventions like pexidartinib, carlumab and PF-04136309 can be used to block this differentiation
Fig. 2The role of TAMS in promoting pancreatic cancer. TAMs promote pancreatic cancer by modulating several key mechanisms in the body. These deregulations are involved in promoting inflammation, metastasis, angiogenesis, immune evasion and chemoresistance thereby leading to the aggressiveness of pancreatic cancer
The ongoing clinical trials of past two years which targets TAMs in pancreatic cancer
| S. No | Curative Agent | Mode of Action | ClinicalTrial.gov ID | Phase | Expected Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Nab-paclitaxel + Gemcitabine + OMP-59R5 | Anti-Notch2/3 Antibody, macropinocytosis | NCT01647828 | II | ↓ M2 origin and polarization |
| 2. | Olaparib + Cediranib | PARP and VEGFR inhibitor | NCT02498613 | II | ↓ M2 recruitment |
| 3. | CRS-207 + GVAX ± Nivolumab | Irradiated GM-CSF, listeria antigen, Anti-PD-1 antibody | NCT02243371 | II | ↑ Macrophage count |
| 4. | Sorafenib + Gemcitabine + Vorinostat + Radiotherapy | VEGFR, PDGFR inhibitor | NCT02349867 | I | ↓M2 recruitment |
| 5. | Pexidartinib + Durvalumab | CSF-1R, Kit and Flt3 inhibitor, anti-PD-1 antibody | NCT02777710 | I | ↓ M2 polarization |
| 6. | Pembrolizumab + AMG820 | Anti-PD-1 antibody, anti-CSF1R antibody | NCT02713529 | II | ↓ M2 polarization |
| 7. | Gemcitabine/Nabpaclitaxel + MM141 | Bispecific Her3 and IGF antibody, macropinocytosis | NCT02399137 | II | ↓ M2 polarization |
| 8. | Galunisertib + Durvalumab | TGF-β receptor inhibitor, anti-PD-L1 antibody | NCT02734160 | I | ↓ M2 differentiation |
| 9. | Buparlisib + mFOLFOX6 | PI3K inhibitor | NCT01571024 | I | ↓ M2 polarization |
| 10. | GVAX + Cyclophosphamide + CRS-207 | Listeria antigen, irradiated GM-CSF | NCT01417000 | II | ↑ Macrophage count |
| 11. | Gemcitabine/Capecitabine + LY3023414 + Abemaciclib | PI3K/DNA-PK/mTOR inhibitor | NCT02981342 | II | ↓ M2 polarization |
| 12. | Nivolumab + Cabiralizumab | Anti-PD-1 antibody, anti-CSF1R antibody | NCT03599362 | II | ↓ M2 polarization and recruitment |
| 13. | Nivolumab + cabiralizumab + gemcitabine | Anti-PD-1 antibody, anti-CSF1R antibody | NCT03697564 | IV | ↓ M2 polarization and recruitment |
| 14. | Cyclophosphamide + GVAX + pembrolizumab + IMC-CS4 | Listeria antigen,Anti-PD-1 antibody | NCT03153410 | I | ↑ Macrophage count and |
| 15. | 5-fluorouracil + bevacizumab + leucovorin + oxaliplatin | Anti-VEGF antibody | NCT03127124 | Ib | ↓ M2 recruitment and differentiation |
| 16. | Capecitabine + temozolomide +/- Bevacizumab | Anti-VEGF antibody | NCT03351296 | II | ↓ M2 recruitment and differentiation |
| 17. | Palbociclib + Gedatolisib | PI3K/mTOR inhibitor | NCT03065062 | I | ↓ M2 polarization |
| 18. | Cabiralizumab + nivolumab + gemcitabine + Nabpaclitaxel | Anti-PD-1 antibody, macropinocytosis, anti-CSF1R antibody | NCT03336216 | II | ↓ M2 polarization and recruitment |
The observation of their outcomes will confirm the clear involvement of TAMs. The expected outcome based on the preclinical literature available is presented in the last column. The ↑ and ↓ signifies the increased and decreased respectively with the context.