| Literature DB >> 31289581 |
Zhicai Wang1,2, Wei Chen2, Xing Zhang1, Zhiming Cai2,3,4, Weiren Huang2,3,4.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) are engineered synthetic receptors that redirect and reprogram T cells to tumor surface antigens for subsequent eradication. The unprecedented efficacy of CD19-CAR T cells against B-cell malignancies has inspired oncologists to extend these efforts for the treatment of solid tumors. However, limited success has been achieved so far, partially due to some of the formidable challenges, e.g. suppression of full activation, inhibition of T cell localization, lacking of ideal targets, inefficient trafficking and infiltration, immunosuppression of microenvironment, and the probability of off targets and associated side effects. Significant progresses have being made recently. Thus, an updated summary is urgently needed. Here in this review, we discuss the advantages and some of the key hurdles encountered by CAR T cell therapy in solid tumors as well as the strategies adopted to improve therapeutic outcomes of this approach. Continuing efforts to increase therapeutic potential and decrease the adverse effects of adaptive cell transfer are suggested as well.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-tumor responses; CAR T cell therapy; Immunosuppression; Solid cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 31289581 PMCID: PMC6603378 DOI: 10.7150/jca.30406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.207
Figure 1Flowcharts of CAR T cell therapy. T cells are collected from peripheral blood of patients and then selected and activated. The CAR genes were transferred into T cells via viral or non-viral systems and expressed. The CAR T cells are expanded in vitro into hundreds of millions in a cell manufacturing facility and then adoptively transferred back to patient. When CAR recognizes the antigen on tumor cells, the intracellular signaling domains within the CAR produce a series of cytokines, resulting in the activation of CAR T cells.
Figure 2Tumor microenvironment (TME) in solid tumor imposes immunosuppression to CAR T cells. Strategies including using immune checkpoint blockade inhibitors or antibodies, activating cytokines and novel CARs were adopted to circumvent the TME suppression effects.
Surface molecules as potential targets for CAR T cell therapies
| Malignancy | Target Antigen | Clinical evaluation | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| NSCLC | HER2/EGFR/MUC1/CEA | EGFR | |
| Pancreatic cancer | PSCA/MUC1/HER2/EGFR | HER2 | |
| Ovarian cancer | MUC16/PSMA/5T4/NKG2DL/HER2 | HER2 | |
| GBM | EGFRvIII/HER2/IL13Rα2/EphA2 | EGFRvIII/HER2/IL13Rα |