| Literature DB >> 31671581 |
Edoardo G Giannini1, Andrea Aglitti2, Mauro Borzio3, Martina Gambato4, Maria Guarino5, Massimo Iavarone6, Quirino Lai7, Giovanni Battista Levi Sandri8, Fabio Melandro9, Filomena Morisco10, Francesca Romana Ponziani11, Maria Rendina12, Francesco Paolo Russo13, Rodolfo Sacco14, Mauro Viganò15, Alessandro Vitale16, Franco Trevisani17.
Abstract
Despite progress in our understanding of the biology of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), this tumour remains difficult-to-cure for several reasons, starting from the particular disease environment where it arises-advanced chronic liver disease-to its heterogeneous clinical and biological behaviour. The advent, and good results, of immunotherapy for cancer called for the evaluation of its potential application also in HCC, where there is evidence of intra-hepatic immune response activation. Several studies advanced our knowledge of immune checkpoints expression in HCC, thus suggesting that immune checkpoint blockade may have a strong rationale even in the treatment of HCC. According to this background, initial studies with tremelimumab, a cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) inhibitor, and nivolumab, a programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) antibody, showed promising results, and further studies exploring the effects of other immune checkpoint inhibitors, alone or with other drugs, are currently underway. However, we are still far from the identification of the correct setting, and sequence, where these drugs might be used in clinical practice, and their actual applicability in real-life is unknown. This review focuses on HCC immunobiology and on the potential of immune checkpoint blockade therapy for this tumour, with a critical evaluation of the available trials on immune checkpoint blocking antibodies treatment for HCC. Moreover, it assesses the potential applicability of immune checkpoint inhibitors in the real-life setting, by analysing a large, multicentre cohort of Italian patients with HCC.Entities:
Keywords: check-point inhibitors; immunotherapy; liver disease; outcome
Year: 2019 PMID: 31671581 PMCID: PMC6896125 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11111689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Mechanisms of immune system paralysis in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Inflammatory damage triggered from various factors (alcohol, hepatitis viruses, lipid accumulation, etc.) and from the gut microbiota is involved in the pathogenesis of HCC both directly and indirectly, through T-cells exhaustion. Exhausted T-cells express inhibitory receptor proteins and have a diminished capacity to produce cytokines, proliferate and kill cells. Indeed, antigen presenting cells (APC) and tumour cells express inhibitory molecules such as programmed cell death ligand 1 (PDL-1) and B7 that interact with the surface antigens programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) on T-lymphocytes, inhibiting the downstream signalling caused by the T-cell receptor (TCR)/ major histocompatibility complex (MHC) interaction with tumour antigens thus favouring tumour growth.
Ongoing clinical trials exploring immune checkpoint inhibitors: alone, in combination with other drugs or with local therapies.
| NCT | Phase | Drug | Procedure | Line of Treatment | Primary End-Point | Estimated Study Completion Date | Company Conducting the Trial |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03298451 | III | Tremelilumab (+Durvalumab) vs Sorafenib | - | 1 | OS | 06/2021 | Astra Zeneca |
| NCT02576509 | III | Nivolumab vs Sorafenib | - | 1 | OS | 07/2020 | BMS |
| NCT03412773 | III | Tislelizumab vs Sorafenib | - | 1 | OS | 05/2022 | BeiGene |
| NCT03062358 | III | Pembrolizumab vs placebo | - | 2 | OS | 01/2022 | MSD |
| NCT02702401 | III | Pembrolizumab vs placebo | - | 2 | OS, PFS | 06/2020 | MSD |
| NCT02702414 | II | Pembrolizumab | - | 1-2 | ORR | 05/2021 | MSD |
| NCT02519348 | II | Tremelilumab (+Durvalumab) | - | 2 | Safety, DLT | 04/2021 | MedImmune LLC |
| NCT03163992 | II | Pembrolizumab | - | 2 | ORR | 12/2020 | Samsung Medical Center |
| NCT02658019 | II | Pembrolizumab | - | >2 | DCR, Safety | 11/2020 | Lynn Feun |
| NCT03389126 | II | Avelumab | - | >2 | ORR | 03/2020 | Seoul National University Hospital |
| NCT03419897 | II | Tislelizumab | - | >2 | ORR | 09/2021 | BeiGene |
| NCT03033446 | II | Nivolumab | SIRT | Any | ORR | 12/2019 | National Cancer Centre, Singapore |
| ign="middle" style="border-bottom:solid thin">1 | ORR | 11/2020 | Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins | ||||
| NCT02821754 | II | Tremelilumab | Local ablation | 1 | PFS | 04/2021 | National Cancer Institute (NCI) |
| NCT03630640 | II | Nivolumab | Electroporation | 1 | RFS | 09/2020 | Assistance Publique—Hôpitaux de Paris |
| NCT03482102 | II | Tremelilumab (+Durvalumab) | BRT | 2 | ORR | 10/2025 | Massachusetts General Hospital |
| NCT03316872 | II | Pembrolizumab | SBRT | 2 | ORR | 04/2022 | University Health Network, Toronto |
| NCT01658878 | IB/II | Nivolumab vs Sorafenib | - | 1 | ORR | 12/2019 | BMS |
| NCT02423343 | IB/II | Nivolumab + Galunisertib | - | 2 | MTD, Safety | 12/2019 | Eli Lilly and Company |
| NCT01658878 | IB/II | Nivolumab + Ipilimumab | - | >2 | ORR | 12/2019 | BMS |
| NCT02940496 | I/II | Pembrolizumab | - | 2 | Biomarkers | 12/2019 | M.D. Anderson Cancer Center |
| NCT03397654 | IB | Pembrolizumab | TACE | 1 | Safety | 12/2020 | Imperial College London |
| NCT02837029 | I | Nivolumab | SIRT | Any | MTD | 07/2020 | Northwestern University |
| NCT03099564 | I | Pembrolizumab | SIRT | 1 | PFS | 01/2020 | Autumn McRee, MD |
| NCT03143270 | I | Nivolumab | debTACE | 1 | Safety | 04/2020 | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center |
| NCT03203304 | I | Nivolumab/Ipilimumab | SBRT | 1 | Safety | 08/2020 | University of Chicago |
| NCT01853618 | I | Tremelilumab | Local Ablation | 1 | Safety | 12/2020 | National Cancer Institute (NCI) |
NCT, number of clinical trial (Clinicaltrials.gov); SIRT, selective intra-arterial radiation treatment; MTD, maximum tolerated dose; ORR, overall response rate; PFS, progression free survival; TACE, transarterial chemoembolisation; debTACE, drug eluting beads transarterial chemoembolisation; SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy; RFS, recurrence free survival.
Potential use of nivolumab and pembrolizumab as first-line therapy in HCC patients according tothe ITA.LI.CA database.
|
| Number of HCCs = 11,483 (including recurrences) | |
| (A) First-step removal | 1. HCC diagnosis before 01/01/2008 = 3144 | |
| 2. HCC recurrence = 4453 | ||
| Number of patients = 3886 (01/01/2008-31/12/2016) | ||
| (B) Second step removal | Missing data = 1403 | |
| Examined population = 2483 (100.0%) | ||
| (C) Third step removal | Nivolumab | Pembrolizumab |
|
Child-Pugh > B7 = 601 ECOG PST > 1 = 343 ECOG PST = 1, BCLC C, resected or RFA/PEI, MC-IN = 86 BCLC 0-A resected = 99 BCLC 0-A RFA/PEI = 238 BCLC B resected = 55 Transplantation = 55 TACE with CR/PR/SD = 577 PBC = 18 Autoimmune hepatitis = 5 Active HBV + HCV = 12 Active HBV + HDV = 12 Autoimmune diseases = 34 Active alcohol abuse = 323 Brain metastases = 2 Story of encephalopathy = 155 Severe ascites = 380 Malignancies previous 3 years = 27 HIV = 22 Leucocytes < 2000/mcL = 63 PLT < 60,000/mcL = 299 Hb < 9 g/dL = 107 GFR < 40 mL/min = 147 Total bilirubin > 3.0 mg/dL = 214 AST/ALT > 5× = 123 Albumin < 2.8 g/dL = 226 INR > 2.3 = 34 |
Child-Pugh > B7 = 601 ECOG PST > 1 = 343 ECOG PST = 1, BCLC C, resected or RFA/PEI, MC-IN = 86 BCLC 0-A resected = 99 BCLC 0-A RFA/PEI = 238 BCLC B resected = 55 Transplantation = 55 TACE with CR/PR/SD = 577 PBC = 18 Autoimmune hepatitis = 5 Active HBV = 95 Double infection HBV/HCV = 36 Autoimmune diseases = 34 Active alcohol abuse = 323 Brain metastases = 2 Story of encephalopathy = 155 Clinically apparent ascites = 1009 Malignancies previous 5 years = 43 HIV = 22 Leucocytes < 1200/mcL = 23 PLT < 60,000/mcL = 299 Hb < 8 g/dL = 33 sCr > 1.5 mg/dL = 121 GFR < 60 mL/min if sCr < 1.5 mg/dL = 502 Total bilirubin > 2.0 mg/dL = 440 AST/ALT > 5× = 123 Albumin < 3.0 mg/dL = 414 INR > 1.5× = 60 Variceal bleeding < 6 months = 103 Main branch PVT/IVC thrombosis = 187 | |
| Final population = 525/2483 (21.1%) | Final population = 268/2483 (10.8%) | |
Abbreviations: ITA.LI.CA, Italian Liver Cancer; HCC, hepatocellular cancer; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; PST, performance status; BCLC, Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer; RFA, radio-frequency ablation; PEI, percutaneous ethanol injection; MC, Milan Criteria; TACE, trans-arterial chemoembolisation; CR, complete response; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease; PBC, primitive biliary cholangitis; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HDV, hepatitis D virus; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; PLT, platelets; Hb, hemoglobin; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; sCr, serum creatinine; AST, aspartate transaminases; ALT, alanine transaminases; INR, international normalised ratio; PVT, portal vein thrombosis; IVC, inferior vena cava.
Figure 2Proportion of patients within the Italian Liver Cancer cohort meeting the criteria for: first-line nivolumab treatment (A); and second-line nivolumab treatment (B).
Figure 3Proportion of patients within the Italian Liver Cancer cohort meeting the criteria for: first-line pembrolizumab treatment (A); or second-line pembrolizumab treatment (B).