| Literature DB >> 31867006 |
Paola Minetto1,2, Fabio Guolo1,2, Silvia Pesce3, Marco Greppi3,4, Valentina Obino3,4, Elisa Ferretti3,4, Simona Sivori3,4, Carlo Genova5, Roberto Massimo Lemoli1,2, Emanuela Marcenaro3,4.
Abstract
In the last years, natural killer (NK) cell-based immunotherapy has emerged as a promising therapeutic approach for solid tumors and hematological malignancies. NK cells are innate lymphocytes with an array of functional competences, including anti-cancer, anti-viral, and anti-graft-vs.-host disease potential. The intriguing idea of harnessing such potent innate immune system effectors for cancer treatment led to the development of clinical trials based on the adoptive therapy of NK cells or on the use of monoclonal antibodies targeting the main NK cell immune checkpoints. Indeed, checkpoint immunotherapy that targets inhibitory receptors of T cells, reversing their functional blocking, marked a breakthrough in anticancer therapy, opening new approaches for cancer immunotherapy and resulted in extensive research on immune checkpoints. However, the clinical efficacy of T cell-based immunotherapy presents a series of limitations, including the inability of T cells to recognize and kill HLA-Ineg tumor cells. For these reasons, new strategies for cancer immunotherapy are now focusing on NK cells. Blockade with NK cell checkpoint inhibitors that reverse their functional block may overcome the limitations of T cell-based immunotherapy, mainly against HLA-Ineg tumor targets. Here, we discuss recent anti-tumor approaches based on mAb-mediated blocking of immune checkpoints (either restricted to NK cells or shared with T cells), used either as a single agent or in combination with other compounds, that have demonstrated promising clinical responses in both solid tumors and hematological malignancies.Entities:
Keywords: NK cell receptors; NK cells; adoptive NK cell therapy; hematological malignancies; immune checkpoint blockade; immunotherapy; solid tumors
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31867006 PMCID: PMC6908847 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Mechanisms of NK cell-mediated killing. In physiological conditions, NK cell activity is tightly regulated by a complex interplay between inhibitory and activating receptors that prevents killing of normal autologous cells expressing an appropriate level of all self-HLA alleles and low/negative levels of ligands for non-HLA-specific activating receptors (aNKR) (A). Downregulation of HLA-I molecules on neoplastic or infected cells induces NK-mediated killing by a “missing-self” recognition mechanism. NK cell activating receptors are co-responsible in inducing NK cell triggering by interacting with ligands (aNKR-ligands) overexpressed or expressed de novo on tumor-transformed or virus-infected cells (B). Allogeneic (alloreactive) donor NK cells are able to kill neoplastic cells of the recipient expressing non-self allotypic determinants on HLA-I molecules (“KIR/KIR-ligand mismatch”) and to control infections with a limited risk of toxicity (e.g., GvHD and HvG) (C). The use of inhibitors of classical NK cell immune checkpoints (i.e., KIR and NKG2A) (D) or immune checkpoints shared with T cells (e.g., PD-1) (E) or, finally, a combination of these approaches represents new promising strategies in NK cell-based immunotherapy.
Relevant clinical trials involving immune checkpoint blockade in NK cells.
| Tinker et al. ( | NKG2A | Advanced gynecological solid tumors | Monalizumab | I | 58 | Manageable safety profile; short term response |
| NCT02643550 | NKG2A; EGFR | Advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck | Monalizumab plus cetuximab | I/II | 31 | Manageable safety profile; ORR: 31%; DCR: 54% |
| Segal et al. ( | NKG2A; PD-L1 | Metastatic microsatellite-stable colorectal cancer | Durvalumab plus monalizumab | I | 40 | Ongoing; preliminary data show manageable safety profile and DCR: 24% at 16 weeks |
| NCT03794544 | NKG2A; PD-L1 | Resectable non-small cell lung cancer | Durvalumab plus monalizumab | II | 160 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| Vey et al. ( | KIR2D | Solid and hematologic malignancies | Lirilumab | I | 37 | No reported dose-limiting toxicity |
| NCT03203876 | KIR2D; PD-1; CTLA-4 | Solid tumors | Lirilumab plus nivolumab with or without ipilimumab | I/II | 21 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03532451 | KIR2D; PD-1 | Resectable bladder cancer | Nivolumab with or without lirilumab | I | 43 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03341936 | KIR2D; PD-1 | Resectable squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck | Nivolumab plus lirilumab | II | 58 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03489343 | TIM-3 | Advanced solid tumors or lymphomas | Sym023 | I | 48 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03311412 | TIM-3; LAG-3 | Advanced solid tumors or lymphomas | Sym021 with or without Sym022 or Sym023 | I | 102 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT02817633 | TIM-3 | Advanced solid tumors | TSR-022 | I | 873 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03680508 | TIM-3; PD-1 | Liver cancer | TSR-022 plus TSR-042 | II | 42 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT04139902 | TIM-3; PD-1 | Resectable melanoma | TSR-042 with or without TSR-022 | II | 56 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03744468 | TIM-3; PD-1 | Solid tumors | BGB-A425 plus tislelizumab | I/II | 162 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03489369 | LAG-3 | Advanced solid tumors or lymphomas | Sym022 | I | 30 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03250832 | LAG-3 | Advanced solid tumors | TSR-033 alone or in combination with PD-1 blocking agents | I | 200 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT04150965 | LAG-3; TIGIT | Multiple myeloma | Elotuzumab | I/II | 104 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT02658981 | LAG-3; PD-1 | Recurrent glioblastoma | BMS-986016 with or without nivolumab | I | 100 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT01968109 | LAG-3; PD-1 | Advanced solid tumors | BMS-986016 with or without nivolumab | I/II | 2,000 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03005782 | LAG-3; PD-1 | Advanced solid tumors | REGN3767 with or without REGN2810 | I | 589 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT04080804 | PD-1; LAG-3; CTLA4 | Advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Nivolumab with or without BMS-986016 or ipilimumab | II | 60 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT02676869 | LAG-3; PD-1 | Advanced melanoma | IMP321 plus pembrolizumab | I | 24 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03119428 | TIGIT; PD-1 | Advanced solid tumors | OMP-313M32 with or without nivolumab | I | 33 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT04047862 | TIGIT; PD-1 | Advanced solid tumors | BGB-A1217 plus tislelizumab | I | 39 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03563716 | TIGIT; PD-L1 | Advanced non-small cell lung cancer | MTIG7192A plus atezolizumab | II | 135 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| Vey et al. ( | KIR2D | Acute myeloid leukemia | IPH2101 | I | 23 | Manageable safety profile |
| Korde et al. ( | KIR2D | Smoldering multiple myeloma | IPH2101 | II | 9 | Failure to meet the primary endpoint (50% decline in M-protein) |
| NCT01592370 | KIR2D; PD-1 | Multiple myeloma | Lirilumab plus nivolumab (among multiple arms including nivolumab) | I/II | 375 (estimated; multiple arms) | Ongoing |
| Guolo et al. ( | PD-1 | Relapsed or refractory Hodgkin lymphoma | Nivolumab supported by the reinfusion of unselected autologous lymphocytes | I/II | 7 | Manageable safety profile; fast immune recovery |
| NCT02557516 | KIR2D | Chronic lymphocytic leukemia | Monalizumab plus ibrutinib | I/II | 22 (estimated) | Ongoing |
| NCT03066648 | PD-1; TIM-3 | Acute myeloid leukemia; high-risk myelodysplastic syndrome | PDR001 and/or MBG453 in combination with Decitabine | I | 235 (estimated) | Ongoing |
References and additional details can be found in the text. For published trials, we included the name of the first author, while for ongoing trials, we included NCT identifier. The trials are reported in the same order of the main text. Pts, patients.