| Literature DB >> 31783782 |
Marc Hilmi1, Cindy Neuzillet1, Julien Calderaro2,3,4, Fouad Lafdil3,4,5, Jean-Michel Pawlotsky3,4,6, Benoit Rousseau7,8.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the second deadliest cancer worldwide, due to its high incidence and poor prognosis. Frequent initial presentation at advanced stages along with impaired liver function limit the use of a broad therapeutic arsenal in patients with HCC. Although main HCC oncogenic drivers have been deciphered in recent years (TERT, TP53, CTNNB1 mutations, miR122 and CDKN2A silencing), therapeutic applications derived from this molecular knowledge are still limited. Given its high vascularization and immunogenicity, antiangiogenics and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI), respectively, are two therapeutic approaches that have shown efficacy in HCC. Depending on HCC immune profile, combinations of these therapies aim to modify the protumoral/antitumoral immune balance, and to reactivate and favor the intratumoral trafficking of cytotoxic T cells. Combination therapies involving antiangiogenics and ICI may be synergistic, because vascular endothelial growth factor A inhibition increases intratumoral infiltration and survival of cytotoxic T lymphocytes and decreases regulatory T lymphocyte recruitment, resulting in a more favorable immune microenvironment for ICI antitumoral activity. First results from clinical trials evaluating combinations of these therapies are encouraging with response rates never observed before in patients with HCC. A better understanding of the balance and interactions between protumoral and antitumoral immune cells will help to ensure the success of future therapeutic trials. Here, we present an overview of the current state of clinical development of antitumoral therapies in HCC and the biological rationale for their use. Moreover, translational studies on tumor tissue and blood, prior to and during treatment, will help to identify biomarkers and immune signatures with predictive value for both clinical outcome and response to combination therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Checkpoint inhibitor; Drug combination; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Immunology; Tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31783782 PMCID: PMC6884868 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-019-0824-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1“Barcelona-Clinic Liver Cancer” (BCLC) classification and treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma according to the 2018 ESMO and EASL Clinical Practical Guidelines. ECOG PS: Eastern Collaborative Oncology Group Performance Status; TACE: transarterial chemoembolization
Main molecular alterations in HCC according to molecular subtypes adapted from the Cancer Genome Atlas Research Network [40]
| Molecular subtype | Genetic features | Epigenetic features | Other characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
iCluster 1 36% | Few Low expression of TERT Overexpression of proliferation markers | microRNA signature mir-122 silencing High expression of miR-181A | Young age Asian patients Female patients Normal Weight High grade Poor prognosis |
iCluster 2 30% | High expression of TERT High expression of CTNNB1 | Low grade Low microvascular invasion | |
iCluster 3 34% | Chromosomal instability 17p loss High activation of CTNNB1 High expression of TERT Activation of VEGF-A pathway | CPG Island hypomethylation | – |
| Frequencies of most prevalent alterations in the whole cohort | TERT mutations 44% TP53 mutations 31% CTNNB1 mutations 27% CDKN2A deletion 13% APOB mutations 10% AXIN1 mutations 8% ARID1A mutations 7% | – |
Summary of clinical trials of immune therapies (single agent or combination with angiogenics inhibitors) in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
| Anti-CTLA-4 | Tremelimumab | Sangro et al. [ | II | 20 | Pre-treated | 8.2 m | 6.5 m | 17.6% | 76.4% |
| Duffy et al. [ | II | 32 | Pre-treated Combination with ablation | 12.3 m | 7.4 m | 26.3% | 63% | ||
| Anti-PD-1 | Pembrolizumab | Zhu et al. [ | II | 104 | Pre-treated | 12.9 m | 4.9 m | 17, 1% CR | 60% |
| Finn et al. [ | III | 413 | Pre-treated | 13.9 m | 2.8 m | 18% | NA | ||
| Nivolumab | El-Kouheiry et al. [ | I/II | 262 | Pre-treated and naive | NR | 4 m | 20, 1% CR | 64% | |
| Cemiplimab | Pishvaian et al. [ | I | 26 | Pre-treated | NR | 3.7 m | 19.2% | 73% | |
| Anti-PD-L1 | Durvalumab | Wainberg et al. [ | I/II | 39 | Pre-treated | 13.2 m | NA | 10.3% | 33% at 24 weeks |
| Combinations | |||||||||
| Anti-PD-1 + Anti CTLA-4 | Nivolumab + ipilumumab | Yau et al. [ | II | 148 | Pre-treated | 24-m OS 40% | NA | 31, 5% CR | 49% |
| Angiogenesis and immune checkpoints inhibitors | Atezolizumab + bevacizumab | Pishvaian et al. [ | Ib | 68 | Naive | NR | 14.9 m | 34, 1% CR | 78% |
| Pembrolizumab + lenvatinib | Ikeda et al. [ | Ib | 18 | Naive | NA | NA | 46% | 92% | |
| Camrelizumab + apatinib | Xu et al. [ | I | 16 | Pre-treated | NR | 5.8 m | 50% | 93.8% | |
| Avelumab + axitinib | Kudo et al. [ | Ib | 22 | Naive | NR | 5.5 m | 13.6%/31.8% (mRECIST) | NA | |
| Cytotoxic agents and Anti-PD-1 | FOLFOX4 or GEMOX + camrelizumab | Qin et al. [ | II | 34 | Naive | NR | 5.5 m | 26.5% | 79.4% |
CR complete response; CTLA-4 Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated protein 4; DCR disease control rate; m months; mOS median overall survival; mPFS median progression-free-survival; N number of randomized patients; NR not reached; NA not available; ORR objective response rate; PD-1programmed cell death-1; PD-L1 Programmed death-ligand 1
Fig. 2Immunological classification of hepatocellular carcinoma adapted from Thorsson et al. [70]. PD-1: programmed cell death-1; PD-L1: programmed cell death-ligand 1; TAM: tumor associated macrophage; TILs: tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes
Fig. 3Potential combination therapies according to the immune profiles of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). CTLA4: cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4; PD-1: programmed cell death-1; TILs: tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes; TAM: tumor-associated macrophage; TGF-β: Transforming growth factor β
Summary of ongoing clinical trials of immune therapies in patients with hepatocellulars carcinoma (HCC)
| Anti-PD-1 | Pembrolizumab | NCT03062358 | III | Advanced HCC, pre-treated | 450 | Recruiting |
| Nivolumab | NCT02576509 | III | Advanced HCC, naive | 1720 | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT03383458 | III | Resected HCC | 530 | Recruiting | ||
| Combinations | ||||||
| Anti-PD-1 + Anti CTLA-4 | Durvalumab + tremelimumab | NCT03298451 | III | Advanced HCC, naive | 1310 | Recruiting |
| Nivolumab + ipilumumab | NCT03510871 | II | Eligible for curative surgery | 40 | Not yet recruiting | |
| NCT03222076 | II | Resected HCC | 45 | Recruiting | ||
| Angiogenesis and ICI | Nivolumab + bevacizumab | NCT03382886 | I | Advanced HCC, pre-treated | 12 | Active, not recruiting |
| Nivolumab + lenvatinib | NCT03418922 | I | Advanced HCC, pre-treated and naive | 30 | Active, not recruiting | |
| Pembrolizumab + lenvatinib | NCT03713593 | III | Advanced HCC, naive | 750 | Recruiting | |
| Transarterial chemoembolization and ICI | Nivolumab | NCT03572582 | II | Intermediate stage HCC | 49 | Recruiting |
| Durvalumab + tremelimumab | NCT03638141 | II | Intermediate stage HCC | 30 | Recruiting | |
| Y90-Radioembolization and Anti-PD-1 | Nivolumab | NCT03033446 | II | Advanced HCC | 40 | Recruiting |
CTLA-4 Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated protein 4; ICI immune checkpoint inhibitors; PD-1 programmed cell death-1; PD-L1 Programmed death-ligand 1
Summary of positive phase 3 clinical trials of angiogenic inhibitors in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
| Sorafenib | SHARP [ | 602 | First-line Versus placebo | 10.7 m | 5.5 m | 2% | 43% | |
| ASIAPACIFIC [ | 226 | First-line Versus placebo | 6.5 m | 2.8 m | 3.3% | 35.3% | ||
| Lenvatinib | REFLECT [ | 954 | First-line Versus sorafenib | 13.6 m | 8.9 m | 24.1, 1%CR | 75.5% | |
| Regorafenib | RESORCE [ | 573 | Second-line Versus placebo | 10.6 m | 3.2 m | 11% | 65% | Exclusion of patients previously intolerant to sorafenib |
| Cabozantinib | CELESTIAL [ | 707 | Second or third-line Versus placebo | 10.2 m | 5.2 m | 4% | 64% | Inclusion of patients previously intolerant to sorafenib |
| Ramucirumab | REACH-2 (35) | 292 | Second-line Versus placebo | 8.5 m | 2.8 m | 4.6% | 59.9% | Inclusion of patients with poor prognosis based on high alpha-foeto-protein levels |
CR complete response; DCR disease control rate; m months; mOS median overall survival; mPFS median progression-free-survival; N number of randomized patients; ORR objective response rate