| Literature DB >> 33823905 |
Byung-Gyu Kim1,2, Ehsan Malek1,2,3, Sung Hee Choi2,4, James J Ignatz-Hoover1,3, James J Driscoll5,6,7.
Abstract
The TGF-β signaling pathway governs key cellular processes under physiologic conditions and is deregulated in many pathologies, including cancer. TGF-β is a multifunctional cytokine that acts in a cell- and context-dependent manner as a tumor promoter or tumor suppressor. As a tumor promoter, the TGF-β pathway enhances cell proliferation, migratory invasion, metastatic spread within the tumor microenvironment and suppresses immunosurveillance. Collectively, the pleiotropic nature of TGF-β signaling contributes to drug resistance, tumor escape and undermines clinical response to therapy. Based upon a wealth of preclinical studies, the TGF-β pathway has been pharmacologically targeted using small molecule inhibitors, TGF-β-directed chimeric monoclonal antibodies, ligand traps, antisense oligonucleotides and vaccines that have been now evaluated in clinical trials. Here, we have assessed the safety and efficacy of TGF-β pathway antagonists from multiple drug classes that have been evaluated in completed and ongoing trials. We highlight Vactosertib, a highly potent small molecule TGF-β type 1 receptor kinase inhibitor that is well-tolerated with an acceptable safety profile that has shown efficacy against multiple types of cancer. The TGF-β ligand traps Bintrafusp alfa (a bifunctional conjugate that binds TGF-β and PD-L1), AVID200 (a computationally designed trap of TGF-β receptor ectodomains fused to an Fc domain) and Luspatercept (a recombinant fusion that links the activin receptor IIb to IgG) offer new ways to fight difficult-to-treat cancers. While TGF-β pathway antagonists are rapidly emerging as highly promising, safe and effective anticancer agents, significant challenges remain. Minimizing the unintentional inhibition of tumor-suppressing activity and inflammatory effects with the desired restraint on tumor-promoting activities has impeded the clinical development of TGF-β pathway antagonists. A better understanding of the mechanistic details of the TGF-β pathway should lead to more effective TGF-β antagonists and uncover biomarkers that better stratify patient selection, improve patient responses and further the clinical development of TGF-β antagonists.Entities:
Keywords: Immunosuppression; Ligand traps; Small molecule inhibitors; TGF-β receptor antagonists; Vactosertib
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33823905 PMCID: PMC8022551 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-021-01053-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 23.168
Fig. 1Agents in Development to Target the TGF-β Pathway in Oncology. Shown are noteworthy antagonists that target the TGF-β pathway and have recently been evaluated in clinical trials or are in clinical development. As indicated, many steps within the TGF-β pathway have been targeted therapeutically. Key tumor-promoting and tumor-suppressing genes transcriptionally regulated by the TGF-β pathwat are indicated
Fig. 2Effects of TGF-β on Antitumor Immunity. TGF-β is produced by multiple cell types within the TME. TGF-β can increase (black arrow) or decrease (red block) the proliferation and functional activity of immune effectors with tumor-promoting or tumor-suppressive outcomes. TGF-β enhances pro-inflammatory Th17 cells along with IL-6. TGF-β also blocks the IFN-γ-mediated induction of pro-inflammatory Th1 cells as well as the IL-4-dependent production of Th2 cells to decrease tumor suppression. TGF-β induces naïve T cell differentiation into Tregs and Treg expansion with IL-2. Tregs then reduce CD8+ T cell development and expansion to increase immune suppression. TGF-β also reduces the production of mast cells (to reduce superoxide and NO production), natural killer (NK) cells (reduced cytokine and IFN-γ production), B cells (reduced IgA secretion), polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs, reduced degranulation), M1 macrophages (reduced pro-inflammatory cytokines, e.g., IL-12) and reduced dendritic cells (DCs) leading to reduced antigen presentation and cytokine production. TGF-β promotes the differentiation and expansion of MDSCs as well as the production of M2 macrophages leading to increased anti-inflammatory cytokines IL-4 and IL-10
Completed clinical trials that evaluated TGF-β pathway antagonists in oncology
| Study NCT Registry Number | Agent | Target(s) | Study Population | Number of Patients | Phase | Clinical Efficacy | Most Frequent Adverse Events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02160106 | Vactosertib | TGF-β RI | Solid tumors | 29 | I | Pharmacokinetics | |
| (TEW-7197) | 35 | I | Dosing model | ||||
| NCT01682187 | Galunisertib (LY2157299) | TGF-β RI | Advanced solid tumors | 65 | I | Glioma population ORR 14% | Thrombocytopenia thrombosis, dyspnea |
| NCT01582269 | Galunisertib ± Lomustine | TGF-β RI | Refractory glioma | 180 | II | mOS: Galunisertib 8 m, Lomustine 7 m, Both 6.5 m | Fatigue, nausea, vomiting |
| NCT01220271 | Temozolomide RT ± Galunisertib | CT/RT TGF-β RI | GBM | 75 | Ib/II | mOS 18.2 vs. 17.9 m | Fatigue, nausea constipation |
| NCT01373164 | Galunisertib ± Gemcitabine | TGF-β RI Chemotherapy | Inoperable or metastatic pancreatic | 170 | I/II | mOS 8.9 vs. 7.1 m | Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia |
| NCT02154646 | Galunisertib + Gemcitabine | TGF-β RI Chemotherapy | Inoperable or metastatic pancreatic cancer | 9 | I | ORR 0% | Elevated liver enzymes |
| NCT02734160 | Galunisertib + Durvalumab | TGF-β RI PD-L1 | Metastatic pancreatic cancer | 32 | I | ORR 3% mPFS 1.9 | Elevated liver enzymes neutropenia |
| NCT02240433 | Galunisertib + Sorafenib | TGF-β RI TKI, Angiogenesis | Metastatic HCC | 14 | I | ORR 9% | Hypophosphatemia Hand-foot syndrome |
| NCT01246986 | Galunisertib | TGF-β RI | Metastatic HCC | 147 | II | mPFS: 2.7 m (part A) 4.2 m (part B) | Neutropenia |
| NCT00356460 | Fresolimumab | TGF-β1, β2, β3 | Advanced melanoma Renal cell cancer | 29 | I | ORR 3 and 5% mPFS 2.75 m | Keratoacanthomas hyperkeratosis |
| NCT01472731 | Fresolimumab RT | TGF-β1, β2, β3 | Glioma | 23 | II | ORR 0% | Fatigue, anemia keratoacanthomas |
| NCT01646203 | LY3022859 | TGF-β RII | Advanced solid Tumors | 14 | I | Not reported | CRS |
| NCT04296942 | Bintrafusp alfa, BN-Brachyury, Entinostat, Adotrastuzumab Emtansine | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Advanced Stage Breast cancer | 19 | I | ORR 21% | Bullous pemphigoid increased lipase, colitis |
| NCT03427411 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | HPV-positive advanced solid tumors | 120 (estimated enrollment) | II | ORR 39% | Colitis, hypokalemia gastroparesis |
| NCT02517398 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Pre-treated cervical tumors | 25 | I | ORR 28% | Hypokalemia |
| NCT02517398 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Refractory head and neck cancer | 32 | I | ORR 22% | Keratoacanthomas hyperglycemia |
| NCT02517398 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Pre-treated NSCLC | 80 | II | PD-L1 > 1%, ORR 40% PD-L1 > 80%,ORR 71% | Keratoacanthomas |
| NCT02517398 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Pre-treated esophageal adenocarcinoma | 30 | I | ORR 20% | Anemia, pain |
| NCT02517398 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Pre-treated gastric cancer | 31 | I | ORR 22% | Anemia, diarrhea, rash |
| NCT02517398 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Pre-treated biliary tract cancer | 30 | I | ORR 23% | ILD |
| NCT02517398 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Refractory colorectal cancer | 29 | I | ORR 3.4% | Anemia, fatigue enteritis |
| NCT02631070 | Luspatercept | ActRIIb IgG1 | Very low, low or intermediate risk MDS | 229 | III | Transfusion independent > 8 weeks asthenia, nausea, 38% vs. 13% | Fatigue, diarrhea, |
| NCT00431561 | Trabedersen vs. Temozolomide/ Lomustine | TGF-β2 mRNA | Recurrent/ Refractory glioma | 142 | IIb | 6 m tumor control rate: Trabedersen 10uM: 33% Trabedersen 80uM: 20% Chemotherapy: 27% | Nervous disorders |
| NCT00844064 | Trabedersen | TGF-β2 mRNA | Advanced tumors known to overproduce TGF-β2 | 62 | I | ||
| NCT01058785 | Belagenpumatucel-L | TGF-β2 Inhibition | NSCLC | 75 | II | ORR 15% | Pain, anemia fatigue |
| NCT00676507 | Belagenpumatucel-L | TGF-β2 Inhibition | Inoperable or metastatic NSCLC | 532 | III | mOS 20 vs 17 m | Allergic reactions |
| NCT02574533 | Vigil + Pembrolizumab | Vaccine Anti-PD-1 | Advanced melanoma | 2 | I | ||
Summary of completed clinical trials utilizing TGF-β targeting agents in a variety of treatment refractory metastatic solid tumors including breast, esophageal, gastric, biliary, pancreatic, non-small cell lung cancer, melanoma, GBM and head and neck tumors. Nine trials utilized small molecule inhibitors, three utilized antibodies, ten utilized ligand traps, two utilized ASOs, and three utilized vaccination strategies
Ongoing clinical trials to evaluate TGF-β pathway antagonists in oncology
| Study NCT Registry Number | Agent | Target(s) | Study Population | Number of Patients | Phase | Clinical status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03724851 | Vactosertib + Pembrolizumab | TGF-β RI | Metastatic CRC, gastric, or GEJC adenocarcinoma | 67 | Ib/IIa | Active, recruiting |
| NCT03732274 | Vactosertib + Durvalumab | TGF-β RI PD-L1 | Advanced NSCLC | 63 | Ib/IIa | Active, recruiting |
| NCT04064190 | Vactosertib + Durvalumab | TGF-β RI PD-L1 | Urothelial cancer | 48 | II | Active, recruiting |
| NCT03143985 | Vactosertib + Pomalidomide | TGF-β RI IMiD Agent (Cereblon) | Relapsed/ Refractory Multiple myeloma | 18 | Ib/IIa | Active, recruiting |
| NCT03698825 | Vactosertib + Paclitaxel | TGF-β RI Tubulin/ Mitotic spindle | Second line therapy for metastatic gastric AC | 62 | Ib/IIa | Active, recruiting |
| NCT04103645 | Vactosertib | TGF-β RI | Anemic, Ph-neg, MPN | 37 | II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT04258072 | Vactosertib naI-IRI/FL | TGF-β RI Chemotherapy | Metastatic pancreatic Adenocarcinoma | 24 | Ib/IIa | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT03802084 | Vactosertib Imatinib | TGF-β RI BCR-abl | Advanced desmoid tumor | 24 | Ib/IIa | Active recruiting |
| NCT02452008 | Galunisertib + Enzalutamide | TGF-β RI AR | Castration-resistant prostate cancer | 60 | II | Active, recruiting |
| NCT03206177 | Galunisertib + Carboplatin/ Paclitaxel | TGF-β RI Chemotherapy | Ovarian carcinosarcoma | 25 | I | Active, recruiting |
| NCT02688712 | Galunisertib + Chemo/RT | TGF-β RI | Locally advanced rectal cancer | II | Active, recruiting | |
| NCT04031872 | LY3200882 Capecitabine | TGF-β RI Chemotherapy | Advanced Chemotherapy Resistant Colorectal Cancer and an Activated TGF-beta Signature | 31 | I/II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT02581787 | Fresolimumab + SBRT | TGF-β1, β2, β3 RT | Stage Ia/Ib NSCLC | 60 | I/II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT03192345 | SAR438459 + Cemiplimab | TGF-β1, β2, β3 PD-L1 | Advanced solid tumors | 350 | I | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT04291079 | SRK-181 + Anti-PD-L1 | TGF-β1 PD-L1 | Locally advanced or metastatic solid tumors | 183 | I | First-in-human, dose-escalation, dose expansion study to evaluate safety, tolerability, PK, PD |
| NCT04349280 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Metastatic or Locally Advanced/Unresectable Urothelial Cancer With Disease Progression or Recurrence Following Treatment With a Platinum Agent | 40 | Ib | Active, recruiting |
| NCT04501094 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Checkpoint inhibitor naive urothelial carcinoma | 75 | II | Active, not yet recruiting |
| NCT04066491 | Cisplatin/Gemcitabine +/- Bintrafusp alfa | Chemotherapy TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | First-line Treatment of Biliary Tract Cancer | 512 | II/III | Active, recruiting |
| NCT04220775 | SBRT Bintrafusp alfa | RT TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Recurrent or Second Primary Head and Neck Squamous Cell Cancer | 21 | I/II | Active, not yet recruiting |
| NCT03833661 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Locally Advanced or Metastatic Biliary Tract Cancer Who Fail or Are Intolerant to First-line Platinum-Based Chemotherapy | 159 | II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT03524170 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Metastatic Hormone Receptor Positive, HER2 Negative Breast Cancer | 20 | I | Active, recruiting |
| NCT04296942 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Advanced Stage Breast Cancer (BrEAsT) | 65 | I | Active, recruiting |
| Brachyury-TRICOM Ado-trastuzumab Emtansine | Vaccines HER2 HDAC deacetylase | |||||
| NCT03436563 | Bintrafusp alfa | TGF-β RII and PD-L1 | Metastatic colorectal cancer or advanced solid tumors with MSI-high | 74 | I/II | Active, recruiting |
| NCT03840915 | Platinum regimen Bintrafusp alfa + and PD-L1 | Chemotherapy TGF-β RII | Stage IV Non-small Cell Lung Cancer | 70 | Ib/II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT03840902 | Chemo-RT Bintrafusp alfa + | Chemo-RT TGF-β RII | Unresectable Stage III Non-small Cell Lung Cancer. Bintrafusp alfa with concurrent chemoradiation followed by bintrafusp vs. concurrent chemoradiation + placebo followed by durvalumab | 350 | III | Active, recruiting |
| NCT02346747 | Vigil | Vaccine | Stage IIIb, IIIc, IV high-grade papillary, serous, clear cell, serous ovarian cancer. | 91 | II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT03073525 | Vigil Atezolizumab | Vaccine PD-L1 | Stage IIIb, IV ovarian cancer. Patients had tumor harvested at surgery and successful manufacturing of Vigil but were ineligible for CL-PTL-119 (the VITAL study) or previously randomized to placebo. | 25 | II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT02725489 | Vigil Durvalumab | Vaccine PD-L1 | Advanced Women’s cancers. Confirmed diagnosis of women's cancer, inclusive, but not limited to breast, ovarian, fallopian tube, primary peritoneal, uterine, cervical, endometrial, that is locally advanced or metastatic for which the projected response rate to durvalumab is 15% or less. | 13 | II | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT02511132 | Vigil | Vaccine | Metastatic Ewing's sarcoma refractory or intolerant to at least 1 prior line of systemic chemotherapy. | 22 | IIb | Active, not recruiting |
| vs. Gem/docetaxel | Chemotherapy | (Part A) | ||||
| + Temozolomide/ Irinotecan | II | (Part B) | ||||
| NCT03842865 | Vigil | Vaccine | Expanded Access Trial of Vigil (Bi-shRNAfurin and GMCSF Augmented Autologous Tumor Cell Immunotherapy) in Advanced Solid Tumors including Ewing's sarcoma, Ewing's tumor metastatic, Ewing's sarcoma metastatic, advanced gynecological cancers, ovarian, cervical, and uterine cancers. | 40 | Expanded Access | Temporarily not available |
Summary of ongoing clinical trials that are utilizing TGF-β targeting agents in solid tumor as well as hematological malignancies including MM and MPNs. Twelve trials utilized small molecule inhibitors, three utilized antibodies, nine utilized ligand traps, and five utilized vaccination strategies
Fig. 3Tumor Intrinsic and Extrinsic Effects of Vactosertib. Vactosertib exerts potent antitumor effects (indicated in red) directly on cancer cells as well as on a number of other cell types