| Literature DB >> 31500143 |
Daniele Cretella1, Graziana Digiacomo1, Elisa Giovannetti2,3, Andrea Cavazzoni1.
Abstract
The recent approval of immune checkpoint inhibitors drastically changed the standard treatments in many advanced cancer patients, but molecular changes within the tumor can prevent the activity of immunotherapy drugs. Thus, the introduction of the inhibitors of the immune checkpoint programmed death-1/programmed death ligand-1 (PD-1/PD-L1), should prompt deeper studies on resistance mechanisms, which can be caused by oncogenic mutations detected in cancer cells. PTEN, a tumor suppressor gene, dephosphorylates the lipid signaling intermediate PIP3 with inhibition of AKT activity, one of the main effectors of the PI3K signaling axis. As a consequence of genetic or epigenetic aberrations, PTEN expression is often altered, with increased activation of PI3K axis. Interestingly, some data confirmed that loss of PTEN expression modified the pattern of cytokine secretion creating an immune-suppressive microenvironment with increase of immune cell populations that can promote tumor progression. Moreover, PTEN loss may be ascribed to reduction of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), which can explain the absence of activity of immune checkpoint inhibitors. This review describes the role of PTEN loss as a mechanism responsible for resistance to anti PD-1/PD-L1 treatment. Moreover, combinatorial strategies between PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors and PI3K/AKT targeting drugs are proposed as a new strategy to overcome resistance to immune checkpoint inhibition.Entities:
Keywords: PD-L1; PTEN; T-cells; immunotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31500143 PMCID: PMC6770107 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11091318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1PTEN pathway and its implication in immuno-therapy resistance. (A) Overview of the PI3K/AKT/PTEN pathway. (B) Scheme of potential immuno-therapy resistance mechanisms.
Major structural genetic alterations of PTEN gene in solid tumors.
| Tumor Type | Mutation (%) | Deletion (%) | LOH (%) | Promoter Methylation (%) | miRNA Alteration | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | 3–5 | 20–40 | 30–40 | 30–50 | miR-106b, -93 | [ |
| Lung cancer | 6–9 predominantly in SQCLC | 20–40 | 20–40 | 20–30 | miR-21 | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | 10–20 | 5–15 | 10–20 | 10–20 | miR-21, -32 | [ |
| Melanoma | 10–20 | 5–10 | 20–40 | 30–50 | miR-25, -221, -222 | [ |
| Glioma | 30–40 | 40–70 | 50–70 | 5–10 | miR-26a | [ |
| Prostate cancer | 5–15 | 10–20 | 20–50 | 1–5 | miR-22 | [ |
| Ovarian | 1–5 | 30–40 | 30–50 | 5–10 | miR-19a, -21, -214 | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | <1 | 15–20 | 30–50 | <1 | miR-21 | [ |
| Kidney cancer | <1 | 1–5 | 20–30 | <1 | miR-23b-5p | [ |
SQCLC: squamous cells lung carcinoma; deletion: loss of both alleles; LOH: loss of heterozygosity.
Clinical trials with PI3K targeting agents coupled with PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors (http://clinicaltrials.gov/).
| Agent | Target | in Combination with | Tumors | Phase | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capivasertib | AKT | Olaparib + Durvalumab | Advanced solid tumors | I | NCT03772561 |
| Copanlisib | PI3K | Nivolumab | Colorectal | I/II | NCT03711058 |
| Olaparib + Durvalumab | Solid tumors | 1b | NCT03842228 | ||
| Nivolumab | Solid tumors and lymphomas | 1b | NCT03502733 | ||
| IPI-549 | PI3K-γ | Atezolizumab + Nab-Paclitaxel | Breast cancer Renal cell carcinoma | II | NCT03961698 |
| Nivolumab | Solid tumors | I | NCT02637531 | ||
| GSK2636771 | PI3K-β | Pembrolizumab | Melanoma | I/II | NCT03131908 |
| Ipatasertib | AKT | Atezolizumab | Solid tumors | I | NCT03673787 |
| Atezolizumab | Breast cancer | 1b | NCT03800836 | ||
| Idelalisib | PI3K-δ | Pembrolizumab | Lung | 1b/2 | NCT03257722 |
| SF1126 | PI3 Kinase and Bromodomain Inhibitor | Nivolumab | HCC | I | NCT03059147 |
| Tenalisib | PI3K-δ/γ | Pembrolizumab | cHL | I/II | NCT03471351 |
| Copanlisib | PI3K | Nivolumab | Colorectal | I/II | NCT03711058 |
| Olaparib + Durvalumab | Solid tumors | 1b | NCT03842228 | ||
| Nivolumab | Solid tumors and lymphomas | 1b | NCT03502733 |
cHL (classical Hodgkin Lymphoma), HCC (hepatocellular carcinoma).