| Literature DB >> 31973059 |
Jason Adhikaree1, Julia Moreno-Vicente2, Aanchal Preet Kaur1, Andrew Mark Jackson1, Poulam M Patel1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is inevitably refractory to surgery and chemoradiation. The hope for immunotherapy has yet to be realised in the treatment of GBM. Immune checkpoint blockade antibodies, particularly those targeting the Programme death 1 (PD-1)/PD-1 ligand (PD-L1) pathway, have improved the prognosis in a range of cancers. However, its use in combination with chemoradiation or as monotherapy has proved unsuccessful in treating GBM. This review focuses on our current knowledge of barriers to immunotherapy success in treating GBM, such as diminished pre-existing anti-tumour immunity represented by low levels of PD-L1 expression, low tumour mutational burden and a severely exhausted T-cell tumour infiltrate. Likewise, systemic T-cell immunosuppression is seen driven by tumoural factors and corticosteroid use. Furthermore, unique anatomical differences with primary intracranial tumours such as the blood-brain barrier, the type of antigen-presenting cells and lymphatic drainage contribute to differences in treatment success compared to extracranial tumours. There are, however, shared characteristics with those known in other tumours such as the immunosuppressive tumour microenvironment. We conclude with a summary of ongoing and future immune combination strategies in GBM, which are representative of the next wave in immuno-oncology therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: glioblastoma; immune checkpoint blockade; immunotherapy; programme death-1; resistance mechanisms
Year: 2020 PMID: 31973059 PMCID: PMC7072315 DOI: 10.3390/cells9020263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Clinical efficacy of programme death 1 (PD-1) therapy in Glioblastoma.
| Drug | Patient Cohort | Study Type | Toxicity | Efficacy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pembrolizumab | Recurrent GBM (n = 9), | Retrospective | Safe | No responses | Blumenthal et al. 2015 [ |
| Pembrolizumab | Recurrent GBM | Phase I | Safe | 1 PD | Reardon et al. 2016 [ |
| Pembrolizumab + hypo-fractionated RT + Bevacizumab | Recurrent GBM or AA | Phase I | Safe | 1 CR | Sahebjam et al. 2016 [ |
| Pembrolizumab | Recurrent solid tumours, Glioma (n = 3) | Case series | Safe | 1 MR | Leibowitz-amit et al. 2015 [ |
| Pembrolizumab | Hypermutated GBM (POLE germline deficiency) | Case study | Safe | 1 PR | Johanns et al. 2016 [ |
| Nivolumab +/− Ipilimumab | Recurrent GBM Monotherapy (3 mg/kg) | Phase I | 0 grade 3–4 AE | 1 PR | Reardon et al. 2016 [ |
| Nivolumab 1 mg/Ipilimumab 3 mg | Phase I | 9/10 grade 3–4 AE | 0 PR | ||
| Nivolumab 3 mg/Ipilimumab 1 mg (n = 20) | Phase I | 5/20 grade 3–4 AE | 0 PR | ||
| Nivolumab | Paediatric GBM with biallelic mismatch repair deficiency (n = 2) | Case study | 1 seizure at initiation | 2 PR | Bouffet et al. 2016 [ |
| Pembrolizumab + Bevacizumab + GMCSF | Recurrent GBM (n = 4) | Case series | Safe | 1 PR | Brown et al. 2016 [ |
| Durvalumab | Recurrent GBM (n = 31) | Phase II, cohort B | Safe | 4 PR | Reardon et al. 2017 [ |
| PD-1 inhibitors + RT | Recurrent HGG (n = 20) | Case series | Safe | 7 PR | Iwamoto et al. 2017 [ |
| Nivolumab | Recurrent GBM | Case report | Safe | PR | Roth et al. 2017 [ |
| Nivolumab vs. Bevacizumab | Recurrent GBM (n = 369) | Phase III | 13% grade 3–4 toxicity Nivolumab | RR 8% vs. 23% (Nivolumab vs. Bevacizumab | Reardon et al. 2017 [ |
| Nivolumab + RT vs. TMZ + RT | 1st line (n = 550) | Phase III | not published | failed to extend OS and PFS | BMS Press release |
| Nivolumab+TMZ + RT vs. TMZ + RT | 1st line (n = 693) | Phase III | not published | failed to extend PFS | BMS Press release |
RT = radiotherapy; TMZ = Temozolomide; PR = partial response; SD = stable disease; MR = mixed response; PD = progressive disease; HGG = high grade glioma; AA = anaplastic astrocytoma; BSG = brain stem glioma; Paeds = paediatric; POLE = DNA polymerase epsilon deficiency; OS = overall survival; PFS = progression-free survival; GMCSF = granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor.
Restriction to PD-1 inhibitor response.
| GBM Specific Barriers | Primary Resistance * | Secondary Resistance * |
|---|---|---|
| Low-intermediate | Enriched genes epithelial-mesenchymal transition | Alterations β2 microglobulin |
| Low-Intermediate mutational burden | Angiogenesis, wound healing, hypoxia, | Alteration |
| Low-intermediate CD8 TIL infiltrate | High monocyte, macrophage chemotaxis genes | Upregulation of alternate checkpoints e.g., TIM-3 |
| Blood–brain barrier | ||
| High corticosteroid use | ||
| Low dendritic cell populations | ||
| High IL-10, TGF-β, CCL2 and IDO suppressive humoral factors |
* in all tumours.
Figure 1Schematic of combination therapies with PD-1/L1 inhibitors (outer circle) targeting different aspects of the cancer-immunity cycle (inner circle).