| Literature DB >> 34041025 |
Alessandro Isidori1, Claudio Cerchione2, Naval Daver3, Courtney DiNardo3, Guillermo Garcia-Manero3, Marina Konopleva3, Elias Jabbour3, Farhad Ravandi3, Tapan Kadia3, Adolfo de la Fuente Burguera4, Alessandra Romano5, Federica Loscocco1, Giuseppe Visani1, Giovanni Martinelli2, Hagop Kantarjian2, Antonio Curti6.
Abstract
In the past few years, our improved knowledge of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) pathogenesis has led to the accelerated discovery of new drugs and the development of innovative therapeutic approaches. The role of the immune system in AML development, growth and recurrence has gained increasing interest. A better understanding of immunological escape and systemic tolerance induced by AML blasts has been achieved. The extraordinary successes of immune therapies that harness the power of T cells in solid tumors and certain hematological malignancies have provided new stimuli in this area of research. Accordingly, major efforts have been made to develop immune therapies for the treatment of AML patients. The persistence of leukemia stem cells, representing the most relevant cause of relapse, even after allogeneic stem cell transplant (allo-SCT), remains a major hurdle in the path to cure for AML patients. Several clinical trials with immune-based therapies are currently ongoing in the frontline, relapsed/refractory, post-allo-SCT and minimal residual disease/maintenance setting, with the aim to improve survival of AML patients. This review summarizes the available data with immune-based therapeutic modalities such as monoclonal antibodies (naked and conjugated), T cell engagers, adoptive T-cell therapy, adoptive-NK therapy, checkpoint blockade via PD-1/PD-L1, CTLA4, TIM3 and macrophage checkpoint blockade via the CD47/SIRPa axis, and leukemia vaccines. Combining clinical results with biological immunological findings, possibly coupled with the discovery of biomarkers predictive for response, will hopefully allow us to determine the best approaches to immunotherapy in AML.Entities:
Keywords: acute myeloid leukemia; checkpoint inhibitors; immunotherapy; monoclonal antibody; natural killer; tolerance
Year: 2021 PMID: 34041025 PMCID: PMC8143531 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.656218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Monoclonal antibodies in AML.
| Category | Drug name | Drug details | Antigen/target | Combination therapy | Indication (AML only) | Effects | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Lintuzumab (HuM195) | Monoclonal Antibody | CD33 | Salvage chemotherapy; cytarabine | R/R AML | Induced antobody-dependent cell-medated citotoxicity and fixing human complement | ( |
| Talacotuzumab (CSL362) | Monoclonal Antibody | CD123 | Daunorubicin and cytarabine; alone; decitabine | R/R AML; high risk AML in I or II CR; alderly high risk AML after HMA failure | Improved ORR; in elderly high-risk AML no efficacy | ( | |
| CSL360 | Chimeric Monoclonal Antibody | CD123 | Alone | Advanced AML | No efficacy | ( | |
|
| Gentuzumab ozogamicin (GO) | ADC combining calicheamicin-γ1 with a IgG4 | CD33 | Induction/consolidation | AML | Improved EFS and OS | ( |
| Lintuzumab 213Bi | Abs labeled with the α-emitters bismuth- 213 (213Bi) | CD33 | After chemotherapy |
| High toxicity and treatment-related death | ( | |
| Lintuzumab Ac225 | Abs labeled with the α-emitters actinium-225 (225Ac) | CD33 | Salvage chemotherapy; venetoclax | R/R AML as a bridge to SCT | Improved CR/CRi rate with prolonged myelosuppression | ( | |
| SGN-CD33A | antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) | CD33 | Alone; azacitidine | Relapsed CD33 positive or declined intensive therapy | Reduction in BM blasts; in combination early mortality | ( | |
| Tagraxofusp (SL-401) | CD123-directed cytotoxin | CD123 | Consolidation Therapy; azacitidine | Adverse risk AML in first CR or RR and naive AML not eligible for induction chemotherapy | Efficacy data not available | ( | |
| IMGN632 | ADC | CD123 | Alone; azacitidine and/or venetoclax | R/R AML or R/R BPDCN | Improved CR/CRi in frontline BPDCN | ( | |
|
| AMG330 | BiTE and CiTE | CD3 and CD33 | Pembrolizumab; | R/R AML |
| ( |
| AMG673 | BiTE | CD3 and CD33x | Alone | R/R AML | Improved CR/CRi | ( | |
| G333 | TandAbs | CD3 and CD33 | Alone | R/R AML | Data not available | ( | |
| AMV564 | TandAbs | CD33 and CD3 | Pembrolizumab | R/R AML | Improved CR/CRi | Na | |
| Flotetuzumab (MGD006 or S80880) | DARTs | CD3 and CD123 | R/R AML | Improved CR/CRi in primary refractory also in TP53 mutated | ( | ||
| Vibecotamab (XmAb14045) | DARTs | CD3 and CD123 | Alone | R/R AML heavily pretreated | Good efficacy | ( | |
| SPM-2 | TRiKe | CD33, CD123 and CD16 | Alone |
| Eliminate LSC | ( |
Adoptive cell therapies.
| Category | Drug name | Drug details | Antigen/target | Combination therapy | Indication (AML only) | Effects | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| CD123 CAR-T | Second generation CAR-T | CD123 | Alone | R/R AML | Beneficial effect but data not available | ( |
| CD33 CAR-T | CD33 | Transplantation of stem/progenitor cells engineered to ablate CD33 | R/R AML | Data not available | ( | ||
| CLL CAR-T | CD33-CLL1 dual specific CAR-T cells | CEC12A or CLL1 | All patients received conditioning of fludarabine and cyclophosphamide | R/R AML | High efficacy and manageable toxicity | ( | |
|
| Haploidentical NK cells | KIR-mismatch NK cells | KIR-KIR-L | Haploidentical NK cells | Advanced AML; high risk AML in CR | Prolonged EFS | ( |
| IL-2, IL-15 | Interleukin | NK cells | Alone | R/R AML | NK-cell expansion; improved CR | ( | |
| Prime haploidentical NK cells | Prime haploidentical NK cells activated with IL-2 | KIR-KIR-L | Enriched with PBMC (T-and B-depleted) | R/R AML | High efficacy, favorable safety profile | ( | |
| CNDO-109-NK cells | Leukemia cell line lysate (CNDO)-activated donor-derived haploidentical NK cells | KIR-KIR-L | As consolidation therapy | High risk AML in CR | High efficacy, favorable safety profile | ( | |
| Expanded NK cells | Expanded NK cells | KIR-KIR-L | Before and after haploidentical SCT | High risk AML | High efficacy, favorable safety profile | ( |
Checkpoint blockade.
| Category | Drug name | Drug details | Antigen/target | Combination therapy | Indication (AML only) | Effects | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Ipilimumab | CTLA-4 inhibitor | CTLA-4 | After allogeneic SCT; decitabine | R/R AML after prior allo-SCT | Durable CR | ( |
| Nivolumab | PD-1 inhibitor | PD-1 | Alone; azacitidine; idarubicin and cytarabine | Maintenance in high risk secondary/therapy related AML; consolidation in relapsed AML; front line therapy in | Good efficacy and favorable safety profile | ( | |
| Pembrolizumab | PD-1 inhibitor | PD-1 | Alone after HDAC followed to allo-SCT; azacitidine | R/R AML; | Good efficacy and favorable safety profile | ( | |
| Sabatolimab | IgG4 antibody | TIM-3 | HMAs |
| Good efficacy and favorable safety profile | ( | |
| Magrolimab | Macrophage checkpoint inhibitor | SIRPα | HMA; venetoclax | Refractory AML TP53 mutated or wild-type | Good efficacy and favorable safety profile | ( |