| Literature DB >> 33168050 |
Simone Camelliti1, Valentino Le Noci1, Francesca Bianchi2, Claudia Moscheni1, Francesca Arnaboldi1, Nicoletta Gagliano1, Andrea Balsari1, Marina Chiara Garassino3, Elda Tagliabue2, Lucia Sfondrini1, Michele Sommariva4.
Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have made a breakthrough in the treatment of different types of tumors, leading to improvement in survival, even in patients with advanced cancers. Despite the good clinical results, a certain percentage of patients do not respond to this kind of immunotherapy. In addition, in a fraction of nonresponder patients, which can vary from 4 to 29% according to different studies, a paradoxical boost in tumor growth after ICI administration was observed: a completely unpredictable novel pattern of cancer progression defined as hyperprogressive disease. Since this clinical phenomenon has only been recently described, a universally accepted clinical definition is lacking, and major efforts have been made to uncover the biological bases underlying hyperprogressive disease. The lines of research pursued so far have focused their attention on the study of the immune tumor microenvironment or on the analysis of intrinsic genomic characteristics of cancer cells producing data that allowed us to formulate several hypotheses to explain this detrimental effect related to ICI therapy. The aim of this review is to summarize the most important works that, to date, provide important insights that are useful in understanding the mechanistic causes of hyperprogressive disease.Entities:
Keywords: Hyperprogressive disease; Immune checkpoint inhibitors; Immune-mediated mechanisms; Immunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33168050 PMCID: PMC7650183 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01721-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
HPD rates in different clinical studies
| Type of cancer | N° of patients | HPD rate (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Different types of cancer | 131 | 9 | [ |
| NSCLC | 335 | 13.1 | [ |
| Gastric cancer | 36 | 11.1 | [ |
| Different types of cancer | 182 | 6.6 | [ |
| NSCLC | 406 | 13.8 | [ |
| NSCLC | 152 | 25.7 | [ |
| HNSCC | 34 | 29 | [ |
| Different types of cancer | 155 | 4 | [ |
Possible immune-mediated mechanisms of HPD involving innate immune cells
Possible role of the innate immune system in determining HPD. In certain contexts, blocking PD-1 on innate immune cells may induce or exacerbate the immunosuppressive activity of these cells
Possible immune-mediated mechanisms of HPD involving T cells
Possible role of T lymphocytes in determining HPD. PD-1 blockade increases the expression of other immune checkpoint receptors on tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes or determines the upregulation of IL-10 receptor on CD8+ T cells, making these cells more sensitive to IL-10-mediated immune suppression. Moreover, blocking PD-1 on Tregs exacerbates their immunosuppressive properties, while anti-CTLA4 antibody promotes the proliferation of CD4+Foxp3-PD-1high T cells, lymphocytes with immunosuppressive properties
Possible mechanisms of HPD involving the interaction between the ICI Fc domain and macrophage Fc receptors
The engagement of an unidentified Fc receptor expressed by TAMs by the anti-PD-1 antibody Fc domain may directly trigger a functional reprogramming of these immune cells or may induce the clustering of PD-1 on macrophages, leading, in both cases, to the acquisition of an enhanced pro-tumor phenotype
Possible tumor-mediated mechanisms of HPD
Peculiar genomic abnormalities in cancer cells as key determinants in triggering HPD upon ICI administration
Fig. 1Effect of chemotherapy on HPD. a Representative image of the crossover of the survival curves observed in clinical trials comparing ICIs versus chemotherapy. b Representative image of survival curves observed in clinical trials comparing chemotherapy+ICIs versus chemotherapy alone. c Overview of the main immunological effect of platinum compounds
Fig. 2Different possible models of HPD development. a HPD as a monofactorial process. b HPD as a multifactorial process. c HPD as a cascade of simultaneous events
Comparison between mechanisms only related to HPD or shared with PD
HPD Hyperprogressive disease, PD Progressive disease, N/A Not assigned