| Literature DB >> 34094969 |
Mara De Martino1, Oscar Padilla2, Camille Daviaud1, Cheng-Chia Wu2,3, Robyn D Gartrell4, Claire Vanpouille-Box1,5.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is among the most aggressive of brain tumors and confers a dismal prognosis despite advances in surgical technique, radiation delivery methods, chemotherapy, and tumor-treating fields. While immunotherapy (IT) has improved the care of several adult cancers with previously dismal prognoses, monotherapy with IT in GBM has shown minimal response in first recurrence. Recent discoveries in lymphatics and evaluation of blood brain barrier offer insight to improve the use of ITs and determine the best combinations of therapies, including radiation. We highlight important features of the tumor immune microenvironment in GBM and potential for combining radiation and immunotherapy to improve prognosis in this devastating disease.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvanticity; antigenicity; glioblastoma; immunosuppression; immunotherapy; radiotherapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34094969 PMCID: PMC8173136 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.671044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Combination of immunotherapy with radiation therapy in clinical development for glioblastoma.
| Target | Agent | New or Recurrent | Phase | Clinical Trial ID | Radiation regimen | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Nivolumab | Newly diagnosed | III | NCT02617589 | Standard fractionation | Active, not recruiting | Unmethylated MGMT; comparison anti-PD-1 versus TMZ each in combination with RT |
|
| Nivolumab | Newly diagnosed | III | NCT02667587 | Standard fractionation | Active, not recruiting | Methylated MGMT; TMZ plus RT combined with anti-PD-1 |
|
| Nivolumab | Newly diagnosed | I | NCT03576612 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Neoadjuvant onclolytic adenovirus (GMCI) + TMZ |
|
| Nivolumab | Recurrent | II | NCT03743662 | Hypofractionated | Recruiting | Re-irradiation (6Gy x 5) +/- anti-PD-1 +/- Bevacizumab |
|
| Nivolumab | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT04195139 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Elderly patients; comparison RT+anti-PD-1 + TMZ versus standard treatment (RT+TMZ) |
|
| Pembrolizumab | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT03018288 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | TMZ +/- heat shock protein (HSPPC-96) |
|
| Pembrolizumab | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT03197506 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Standard therapy (RT+TMZ) +/- anti-PD-1 |
|
| Pembrolizumab | Recurrent | I | NCT02313272 | Standard fractionation | Active, not recruiting | Bevacizumab and RT (6Gy x 5) +/- anti-PD-1 |
|
| Pembrolizumab | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT03899857 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | standard treatment (RT+TMZ) + anti-PD-1 |
|
| Pembrolizumab | Newly diagnosed | I | NCT02287428 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Unmethylated MGMT; RT+anti-PD-1+NeoAntigen Vaccine |
|
| Pembrolizumab | Newly diagnosed | I | NCT03426891 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Standard therapy (RT+TMZ) +/- HDAC inhibitor (Vorinostat) +/- anti-PD-1 |
|
| Pembrolizumab | Recurrent | II | NCT03661723 | Hypofractionated | Recruiting | Re-irradiation (7Gy x 5) per week for 2 weeks +/- Bevacizumab |
|
| Nivolumab and Ipilimumab | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT03367715 | Hypofractionated | Recruiting | Unmethylated MGMT; RT (6Gy x 5) + anti-PD-1 + anti-CTLA4 |
|
| Nivolumab and Ipilimumab | Newly diagnosed | II/III | NCT04396860 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Unmethylated MGMT; comparison standard treatment (RT+TMZ) versus RT+anti-PD-1+anti-CTLA-4 |
|
| Nivolumab and BMS-986205 | Newly diagnosed | I | NCT04047706 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) +/- anti-PD-1 +/- IDO inhibitor |
|
| Durvalumab | Newly diagnosed and recurrent | II | NCT02336165 | Standard fractionation | Active, not recruiting | Bevacizumab |
|
| Durvalumab | Recurrent | I/II | NCT02866747 | Hypofractionated | Recruiting | RT (8Gy x 3) |
|
| Atezolizumab | Newly diagnosed | I/II | NCT03174197 | Standard fractionation | Active, not recruiting | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) +/− anti-PD-L1 |
|
| Avelumab | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT02968940 | Hypofractionated | Completed | IDH mutant; RT (6Gy x 5) |
|
| Avelumab | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT03047473 | Standard fractionation | Active, not recruiting | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) +/− anti-PD-L1 |
|
| Avelumab | Recurrent | II | NCT03291314 | Standard fractionation | Completed | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) + anti-PD-L1 + tyrosine kinase inhibitor (axitinib) |
|
| Sargranostim | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT02663440 | Hypofractionated | Unknown | RT (regimen not specified) + TMZ + GM-CSF |
|
| Sargranostim and Hiltonol | Recurrent | I | NCT03392545 | Not specified | Recruiting | RT + GM-CSF and poly I:C |
|
| GM-CSF and Td | Newly diagnosed | II | NCT03927222 | Standard fractionation | Recruiting | Unmethylated MGMT; Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) + Td + GM-CSF |
|
| Galunisertib | Newly diagnosed | I/II | NCT01220271 | Standard fractionation | Completed | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) +/− anti-TGF-β |
|
| Indoximod | Newly diagnosed | I/II | NCT02052648 | Hypofractionated | Completed | TMZ +/− bevacizumab +/− IDO inhibitor +/− RT (5.5 × 5 Gy) |
|
| Plexirafor | Newly diagnosed | I/II | NCT01977677 | Standard fractionation | Completed | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) +/− CXCR4 inhibitor |
|
| Pexidartinib | Newly diagnosed | I/II | NCT01790503 | Standard fractionation | Completed | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) +/− CSF1R inhibitor |
|
| IGV-001 | Newly diagnosed | Iib | NCT04485949 | Standard fractionation | Not yet recruiting | Standard treatment (RT+TMZ) +/− IGV-001 cell immunotherapy |
|
| Atezolizumab | Recurrent | II | NCT04729959 | Hypofractionated | Not yet recruiting | IDH1 wild type; PD-L1 inhibitor; tocilizumab; RT |
Figure 1The unique immune response in GBM and its modulation by RT. For many years, the central nervous system (CNS) was thought to be excluded from immune surveillance. However, it is now known that the CNS is not isolated from activated T cells and that CNS antigens can be presented locally or peripherally in the draining cervical lymph nodes or the dural sinuses. Diverse types of antigen presenting cells (APCs) exist within glioblastoma (GBM), including microglia, macrophages, astrocytes and classic APCs such as dendritic cells (DCs). APCs that have captured tumor antigens can present to naïve T cells, leading to their activation and expansion. Activated T cells migrate into the brain through a disrupted blood brain barrier (BBB), but once in the tumor microenvironment (TME) they differentiate into exhausted T cells. Within the TME, there are immunosuppressive regulatory T cells (Tregs), myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSC), reactive astrocytes and pro-tumoral macrophages and microglia. Radiotherapy (RT), the standard of care for GBM, induces the exposure of tumor neoantigens and increases the T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire. Moreover, tumor irradiation promotes the release of danger associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) and type I interferon (IFN-I), which stimulate APCs cross-priming of T cells. All of these suggest that RT can be used to overcome GBM immunosuppression to optimally prime anti-tumor immunity.