| Literature DB >> 32290124 |
Marit J van Elsas1, Thorbald van Hall1, Sjoerd H van der Burg1.
Abstract
Cancer immunotherapies, including checkpoint inhibitors, adoptive T cell transfer and therapeutic cancer vaccines, have shown promising response rates in clinical trials. Unfortunately, there is an increasing number of patients in which initially regressing tumors start to regrow due to an immunotherapy-driven acquired resistance. Studies on the underlying mechanisms reveal that these can be similar to well-known tumor intrinsic and extrinsic primary resistance factors that precluded the majority of patients from responding to immunotherapy in the first place. Here, we discuss primary and secondary immune resistance and point at strategies to identify potential new mechanisms of immune evasion. Ultimately, this may lead to improved immunotherapy strategies with improved clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: immunotherapy; primary resistance; secondary resistance
Year: 2020 PMID: 32290124 PMCID: PMC7226490 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12040935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Examples of clinical trials resulting in acquired resistance during immunotherapy.
| Therapy | Disease | Study Type | Patients Enrolled | RR | CCR | Relapse RR | Relapse | Relapse Start | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 30 | 50 | 100% | 10 | 30 | 50 | 100% | |||||
| Pembrolizumab [ | Advanced melanoma | Retrospective analysis | 96 | 13 | 12 * | 22 * | 8 * | 2/13 | 2/12 | 2/22 | 0/8 | 3 months |
| JS001 (PD-1 inhibitor) [ | Advanced melanoma, urothelial cancer, renal cell cancer | Phase I clinical trial | 36 | 5 * | 3 * | 4 * | 1 * | 2/5 | 1/3 | 0/4 | - | 8 weeks |
| Nivolumab OR Pembrolizumab [ | Advanced NSCLC | Retrospective analysis | 160 | 15 | 15 | 13 | 1 | 4/15 | 6/15 | 3/13 | 0/1 | 2 months |
| αPD-L1 antibody [ | Melanoma NSCLC | Phase I clinical trial | 41 | 7 | 5 | 5 | 1 | 2/7 | 3/5 | 2/5 | 0/1 | 6 weeks |
| Nivolumab [ | Urothelial Cancer | Phase I/II clinical trial | 74 | 8 | 5 | 12 | 3 | 5/8 | 3/5 | 2/12 | 0/3 | 6 weeks |
| Ipilimumab + Gemcitabine + Cisplatin [ | Metastatic Urothelial cancer | Phase II clinical trial | 36 | 1 | 4 | 9 | 8 | 1/1 | 3/4 | 3/9 | 6/8 | 6 weeks |
| Nivolumab + ISA 101 (SLP HPV16 vaccine) [ | HPV16+ OPC, anal or cervical cancer | Phase II clinical trial | 24 | 2 | 1 * | 5 * | 2 * | 2/2 | 1/1 | 2/5 | 0/2 | 18 weeks |
| Pelareorep + Gemcitabine [ | PDAC | Phase II clinical trial | 29 | 7 | 1 * | 0 | 0 | 3/7 | 0/1 | - | - | 1 month |
| siWT1 peptide vaccine + Gemcitabine [ | PDAC | Phase II clinical trial | 42 | 14 | 5 | 3 | 0 | 5/14 | 2/5 | 1/3 | - | 6 weeks |
| Adenoviral vector with IFNα2b gene + Celecoxib + chemotherapy [ | MPM | Phase II clinical trial | 40 | 7 * | 10 * | 8 * | 0 * | 2/7 * | 3/10 * | 1/8 * | - | 6 weeks * |
| HPV+TILs + Cyclophosphamide + Fludarabine [ | Cervical cancer, HPV+ | Phase II clinical trial | 29 | 6 | 16 | 3 | 2 | 2/6 | 9/16 | 0/3 | 0/2 | 1 month |
RR 10 < 30% = a total tumor burden decline of 10–30% from baseline at some point during the study; RR 30 < 50% = a total tumor burden decline of 30–50% from baseline at some point during the study; RR 50 < 100% = a total tumor burden decline of 50–100% from baseline at some point during the study; CRR = a total tumor burden decline of 100% from baseline at some point during the study; Relapse = any total tumor burden decline followed by tumor outgrowth surpassing a size defined as RR (10–30%, 30–50%, 50–100% and 100%); Relapse start = the estimated time, from treatment initiation, at which tumors started to grow out again following the initial response. * Numbers verified by the authors; others were estimated based on published data when exact numbers were not provided.
Figure 1A simplified version of the cancer immunity cycle, adapted from Chen & Mellman [74] to show the tumor cell intrinsic and extrinsic pathways in T cell-based immunotherapy resistance. The numbers refer to steps in the original cancer immunity cycle. 1. The release of cancer cell antigens (cancer cell death); 2. Cancer antigen presentation (dendritic cells/APCs); 3. Priming and activation (Antigen Presenting Cells (APCs) & T cells); 4. The trafficking of T cells to tumors (Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTLs)); 5. The infiltration of T cells into tumors (CTLs, endothelial cells); 6. The recognition of cancer cells by T cells (CTLs, cancer cells); 7. The killing of cancer cells (immune and cancer cells). .
Figure 2A workflow for the identification and validation of immunotherapy resistance mechanisms. .