| Literature DB >> 30931508 |
S K Daniel1, K M Sullivan1, K P Labadie1, V G Pillarisetty2.
Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is a lethal disease with limited response to cytotoxic chemoradiotherapy, as well as newer immunotherapies. The PDA tumor microenvironment contains infiltrating immune cells including cytotoxic T cells; however, there is an overall immunosuppressive milieu. Hypoxia is a known element of the solid tumor microenvironment and may promote tumor survival. Through various mechanisms including, but not limited to, those mediated by HIF-1α, hypoxia also leads to increased tumor proliferation and metabolic changes. Furthermore, epithelial to mesenchymal transition is promoted through several pathways, including NOTCH and c-MET, regulated by hypoxia. Hypoxia-promoted changes also contribute to the immunosuppressive phenotype seen in many different cell types within the microenvironment and thereby may inhibit an effective immune system response to PDA. Pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs) and myofibroblasts appear to contribute to the recruitment of myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) and B cells in PDA via cytokines increased due to hypoxia. PSCs also increase collagen secretion in response to HIF-1α, which promotes a fibrotic stroma that alters T cell homing and migration. In hypoxic environments, B cells contribute to cytotoxic T cell exhaustion and produce chemokines to attract more immunosuppressive regulatory T cells. MDSCs inhibit T cell metabolism by hoarding key amino acids, modulate T cell homing by cleaving L-selectin, and prevent T cell activation by increasing PD-L1 expression. Immunosuppressive M2 phenotype macrophages promote T cell anergy via increased nitric oxide (NO) and decreased arginine in hypoxia. Increased numbers of regulatory T cells are seen in hypoxia which prevent effector T cell activation through cytokine production and increased CTLA-4. Effective immunotherapy for pancreatic adenocarcinoma and other solid tumors will need to help counteract the immunosuppressive nature of hypoxia-induced changes in the tumor microenvironment. Promising studies will look at combination therapies involving checkpoint inhibitors, chemokine inhibitors, and possible targeting of hypoxia. While no model is perfect, assuring that models incorporate the effects of hypoxia on cancer cells, stromal cells, and effector immune cells will be crucial in developing successful therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Hypoxia; Immunotherapy; Pancreatic cancer; Solid tumor
Year: 2019 PMID: 30931508 PMCID: PMC6441665 DOI: 10.1186/s40169-019-0226-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Therapies targeting hypoxia or hypoxic downstream effects in pancreatic adenocarcinoma
| Category | Mechanism | Drug(s) | Clinical trials in pancreatic adenocarcinoma |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simulates increased oxygen levels | Electron affinity increases free radical formation | Misonidazole | Pre-clinical, non-pancreatic cancers |
| Promote oxygen dissociation from hemoglobin | OXY111A | NCT02528526 (unknown) | |
| Small molecule enzyme mimetic that converts superoxide to hydrogen peroxide and oxygen | GC4419 | NCT03340974 (recruiting) | |
| Hypoxia-activated pro-drug | Converted to active cytotoxic drug via cellular reductases | Evofosfamide (TH-302)—Mustard | NCT01746979 (completed), NCT02402062 (active), NCT00743379 (completed), NCT02047500 (terminated) |
| Hypoxia activated topoisomerase | Banoxantrone/AQ4N | NCT00090727 (unknown) | |
| Hypoxia-targeting fusion protein | Protein-transduction domain, oxygen dependent degradation domain similar to HIF-1α, and cleaved caspase 3 pro-enzyme or other cytotoxic element | POP33 | Pre-clinical |
| Gene-Directed Enzymatic Pro-drug Therapy (GDEPT) | Viral vectors transfer heterologous gene to tumor cells and hypoxia response element in promoter causes increased transcription of target gene in hypoxia to convert pro-drug to active form | Vectors (retroviruses) containing suicide genes such as Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase, cytosine deaminase, or cytochrome P450 | Pre-clinical |
| Direct HIF inhibition | Binds to HIF-1α and/or HIF-2α and inhibits dimerization and transcription | Acriflavine | Pre-clinical, Non-pancreatic cancers |
| Inhibits HSP 90 leading to HIF-1α degradation | XL888 | NCT03095781 (recruiting) | |
| Inhibition of major pathways influenced by HIF | STAT3 inhibitor | Napabucasin (BBI608)—small molecule | NCT02231723 (active) |
| Notch inhibition via gamma-secretase inhibitor | MK-0752 | NCT01098344 (completed), NCT02289898 (completed), NCT01145456 (completed), NCT01131234 (completed), NCT01232829 (completed) | |
| Notch inhibition via binding delta-like ligand 4 | TGR-1202 | NCT02574663 (active) | |
| Notch inhibition via antibody targeting Notch 2/3 receptors | Tarextumab (OMP-59R5) | NCT01647828 (completed) | |
| PI3K inhibition via small molecule binding | Alpelisib (BYL719) | NCT02077933 (active), NCT02155088 (active) | |
| Hedgehog signaling pathway inhibition via signal transducer smoothened inhibition by small molecule | Sonidegib (LDE-225) | NCT01487785 (completed), NCT01195415 (completed), NCT01064622 (completed), NCT00878163 (active), NCT01537107 (suspended), NCT01383538 (completed) | |
| Inhibition of metabolic changes associated with hypoxia | Shifts cell metabolism from glycolysis to oxidate phosphorylation | BPM31510—liposomal CoQ10 | NCT02650804 (recruiting) |
| Indolamine 2,3 dioxygenase-1 inhibitor to prevent trypthophan depletion | Epacadostat | NCT03006302 (recruiting), NCT03432676 (withdrawn) | |
| Inhibition of CD73 to prevent adenosine accumulation | CPI-006—anti-CD73 humanized antibody | NCT03454451 (recruiting) | |
| Inhibition of A2A adenosine receptor to prevent adenosine binding on lymphocytes | NIR178—small molecule | NCT03207867 (recruiting) | |
| Interference with MMP-9 upregulation | Zoledronic acid—decrease MMP-9 production by myeloid derived cells | NCT00892242 (terminated) | |
| Inhibition of cytokines upregulated by hypoxia | TGF-β inhibition via prevention of binding to receptor or signal transduction | Galunisertib—TGFbR1 | NCT02734160 (active), NCT02154646 (completed), NCT01373164 (completed), NCT03666832 (not yet recruiting), NCT03451773 (suspended), NCT02947165 (recruiting) |
| TGF-β inhibition via TGF-β2 antisense oligonucleotide | AP 12009 | NCT00844064 (completed) | |
| IL-6 inhibition | Tocilizumab—anti-IL-6 receptor | NCT02767557 (recruiting) | |
| Inhibition of chemokines upregulated by hypoxia | Prevention of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibition via anti- PD-L1 antibodies | Durvalumab | NCT03257761 (recruiting), NCT03376659 (recruiting), NCT02403271 (completed), NCT03245541 (recruiting), NCT03572400 (recruiting), NCT02868632 (recruiting), NCT02639026 (recruiting), NCT02734160 (active), NCT03344172 (recruiting), NCT03637491 (recruiting), NCT03829501 (recruiting) |
| Inhibition of Treg migration via CCR2/CCR5 antagonist | BMS-813160—small molecule | NCT03184870 (recruiting), NCT03767582 (not yet recruiting) | |
| Inhibition of MDSC and Treg recruitment via decreased CXCR4 inhibition | BL-8040—small molecule | NCT02907099 (recruiting), NCT02826486 (unknown), NCT03277209 (active), NCT02179970 (completed) | |
| Inhibition of MDSC and Treg recruitment via decreased CXCL12(SDF-1) inhibition | Olaptesed—small molecule | NCT03168139 (active) |
HIF, hypoxia-inducible factor; STAT, signal transducer and activator of transcription; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; HSP, heat shock protein; MMP, matrix metalloproteinases; TGF, transforming growth factor; PD, programmed cell death; MDSC, myeloid derived suppressor cell; Treg, regulatory T cell; SDF, stromal-derived factor