| Literature DB >> 34193217 |
Apostolia-Maria Tsimberidou1, Karlyle Van Morris2, Henry Hiep Vo3, Stephen Eck4, Yu-Feng Lin5, Jorge Mauricio Rivas5, Borje S Andersson6.
Abstract
T-cell receptor (TCR)-based adoptive therapy employs genetically modified lymphocytes that are directed against specific tumor markers. This therapeutic modality requires a structured and integrated process that involves patient screening (e.g., for HLA-A*02:01 and specific tumor targets), leukapheresis, generation of transduced TCR product, lymphodepletion, and infusion of the TCR-based adoptive therapy. In this review, we summarize the current technology and early clinical development of TCR-based therapy in patients with solid tumors. The challenges of TCR-based therapy include those associated with TCR product manufacturing, patient selection, and preparation with lymphodepletion. Overcoming these challenges, and those posed by the immunosuppressive microenvironment, as well as developing next-generation strategies is essential to improving the efficacy and safety of TCR-based therapies. Optimization of technology to generate TCR product, treatment administration, and patient monitoring for adverse events is needed. The implementation of novel TCR strategies will require expansion of the TCR approach to patients with HLA haplotypes beyond HLA-A*02:01 and the discovery of novel tumor markers that are expressed in more patients and tumor types. Ongoing clinical trials will determine the ultimate role of TCR-based therapy in patients with solid tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Adoptive T-cell receptor-based therapy; Biomarker screening; Clinical trials; Human leukocyte antigen typing; Lymphodepletion; Solid tumors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34193217 PMCID: PMC8243554 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-021-01115-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Schematic view of TCR-based adoptive T-cell therapy. (1) Patient’s screening starts with HLA typing. If HLA is A*02:01 type, a tumor biopsy is performed (2) to screen the tumor tissue for the expression of the targeted antigen (3), followed by leukapheresis (4). PBMCs from patient leukapheresis are isolated and pre-activated using anti-CD3 and -CD28 antibodies (5). A target-specific TCR is isolated from a healthy donor, characterized, and modified (6). A lentiviral vector is constructed and used to transfer the target-specific TCR in the T-cells (7). The activated PBMCs are transduced with a lentiviral vector encoding the target-specific TCR (8). Transduced T-cells are expanded to large numbers in 3–5 days and are frozen (9). Upon completion of the release testing, the T-cells are ready to be infused (10). Patients are typically treated with lymphodepletion, followed by T-cell product infusion, followed by low-dose interleukin 2. Patients are monitored for as long as 15 years to observe for delayed adverse events following exposure to the investigational gene therapy product
Fig. 2Schematic view of MHC class I and MHC class II molecules. MHC class I and class II molecules have high levels of polymorphism; a similar three-dimensional structure; a genetic location within one locus; and a similar function in presenting peptides to the immune system. MHC class I molecules present peptides at the cell surface to CD8 + T-cells, whereas MHC class II molecules present peptides to CD4 + T-cells that are derived from proteins degraded in the endocytic pathway. MHC class II molecules are primarily expressed by professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs), such as dendritic cells, macrophages, and B cells, and are conditionally expressed by other cell types. The transmembrane α- and β-chains of MHC class II molecules are assembled in the ER and associate with the invariant chain (Ii). The resulting Ii-MHC class II complex is transported to a late endosomal compartment termed the MHC class II compartment (MIIC). Here, the variant chain is digested, leaving a residual class II-associated Ii peptide (CLIP) in the peptide-binding groove of the MHC class II heterodimer. In the MIIC, MHC class II molecules require the chaperone HLA-DM to facilitate the exchange of the CLIP fragment for a specific peptide derived from a protein degraded in the endosomal pathway. MHC class II molecules are then transported to the plasma membrane to present their peptide cargo to CD4 + T-cells. In B cells, a modifier of HLA-DM is expressed called HLA-DO, and this protein associates with HLA-DM and restricts HLA-DM activity to more acidic compartments, thus modulating peptide binding to MHC class II molecules
Fig. 3Schematic view of TCR and CAR structures. a TCR and CD3 molecules form a non-covalent TCR/CD3 receptor complex on the T-cell surface that recognizes and binds to an antigen peptide presented by MHC. b Transgenic CAR expressed on the surface of the T-cell recognizes a protein target (surface antigen) on the tumor cell c. A bispecific antibody (e.g., CD3 antigen bispecific protein) can bind to different antigens presented by MHC and/or d. A protein target on the surface of the tumor cell can be recognized by the TCR/CD3 complex
Comparison between TCR-T, CAR-T, and CD3-directed bispecific antibodies and TCRs
| Modified TCR expressed on T-cells, NK cells, and other cells | CAR expressed on T-cells, NK cells, and other cells | CD3-directed bispecific antibodies and TCRs | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Constructs | Native or minimally engineered native TCR delivered via biologic vector | Artificial receptor complex delivered by a biologic vector | Antibody-like construct engineered for dual binding |
| Targets | MHC peptides derived from intracellular proteins | Surface proteins and glycans | Either MHC peptides or surface proteins and glycans |
| Manufacturing | Ex vivo gene transfer into autologous T-cells or NK cells, “personalized” for each patient | Ex vivo gene transfer into autologous T-cells or NK cells, “personalized” for each patient | “Off-the-shelf” conventional protein |
| Mechanism of action | Binds and kills target cells leading to limited clonal expansion of T-cells | Binds and kills target cells leading to extensive clonal expansion of T-cells | Redirects endogenous T-cells to bind and kill target cells leading to polyclonal expansion of T-cells |
| Dosing | Single or limited doses | Single or limited doses | Repetitive dosing |
| Availability | Experimental basis only | Experimental and commercially available products | Experimental and commercially available products |
| Unique facets | Small patient populations for any single construct | Limited number of suitable potential targets | Complex drug protein design needed to achieve optimal binding characteristics |
| Safety | Modest cytokine release syndrome due to limited proliferation | Extensive cytokine release syndrome due to extensive cell proliferation | Cytokine release syndrome easily managed by adjusting dose and infusion rate |
| Mechanism of resistance | Loss of target, loss of IFNγ signaling | Loss of target, loss of IFNγ signaling | Loss of target; loss of target fucosylation |
CAR chimeric antigen receptor, IFNγ interferon gamma, MHC major histocompatibility complex, NK natural killer, TCR T-cell receptors. References [20, 108]
Pipeline development: TCR-based therapy programs and their targets
| Company/institution | TCR program(s) (investigational) | Target | Indication(s) | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adaptimmune | ADP-A2M4 SPEAR T-cells | MAGE-A4 | Synovial Sarcoma | TCR (ADP-A2M4) targeting metastatic or inoperable (advanced) Synovial Sarcoma or MRCLS who have received prior chemotherapy and whose tumor expresses the MAGE-A4 tumor antigen. Evaluating urothelial (bladder) cancers, melanoma, head and neck cancer, ovarian cancer, NSCLC, esophageal cancer, gastric cancers, synovial sarcoma, and Myxoid Round Cell Liposarcoma (MRCLS). Adapted to mixed solid tumors secondary studies |
| Adaptimmune | ADP-A2M4CD8 SPEAR T-cell | MAGE-A4 | Solid Tumors | TCR (ADP-A2M4CD8) which also expresses the CD8α co-receptor alongside the engineered TCR that targets MAGE-A4. Preclinical data indicate that co-expression of CD8α may broaden the immune response against solid tumors and increase antitumor activity by leveraging CD4 + cells into CD8 + killer or cytotoxic T-cells while retaining their CD4 + helper function |
| Adaptimmune | ADP-A2M10 T-cell | MAGE-A10 | NSCLC, Melanoma, Bladder, Head and Neck | TCR (ADP-A2M10) targeting MAGE-A10 with potential ability to bind target peptides from multiple cancer types |
| Adaptimmune | ADP-A2AFP SPEAR T-cell | AFP | Hepatocellular Carcinoma | TCR (ADP-A2AFP) in SPEAR T-cell product which targets alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). Currently in Phase I clinical trial for the treatment of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (liver cancer) |
| Bluebird Bio | MCC1 TCR | MCPyV | Merkel cell carcinoma | Autologous CD4 + and CD62L-expressing CD8 + T-cells expressing the high affinity T-cell receptor (TCR) A2-MCC1, specific for the human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-A02-restricted Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV; MCV) viral oncoprotein. Final product is a cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) that targets tumor cells expressing the MCPyV viral oncoprotein. MCPyV viral oncoprotein is highly expressed in Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) caused by MCPyV |
| Bluebird Bio/Medigene | MAGE-A4 TCR | MAGE-A4 | Solid Tumors/Melanoma | Autologous human T lymphocytes transduced with MAGE-A4 as a co-receptor-independent TCR. After isolation, transduction, expansion, and reintroduction, MAGE-A4-specific TCR gene-transduced T lymphocytes bind to tumor cells expressing MAGE-A4. Effecting mechanism both inhibiting growth and increased cell death for MAGE-A4-expressing tumor cells. MAGE-A4 is overexpressed by a variety of cancer cell types |
| Kite/Gilead Sciences | KITE-718 | MAGE-A3 and/or MAGE-A6 | Solid Tumors/Advanced Cancers | Genetically modified T-cells which target tumor cells that express MAGE-A3 and/or MAGE-A6 in patients with solid tumors with relapsed or refractory disease after a systemic standard of care treatment |
| Kite/Gilead Sciences | KITE-439 | HPV16 E6 and HPV16 E7 | Solid Tumors/Advanced Cancers | Genetically modified T-cells which target cells that express HPV16 + solid tumors in patients with relapsed or refractory disease after at least 1 line of therapy that included systemic chemotherapy and not amenable to locoregional definitive therapy |
| Kite/Gilead Sciences | KITE-439 | HPV16hat HOV | Solid Tumors/Advanced Cancers | Genetically modified T-cells which target cells that express HPV16 + solid tumors in patients with relapsed or refractory disease after at least 1 line of therapy that included systemic chemotherapy and not amenable to locoregional definitive therapy |
| Immatics | IMA201-101 | MAGE-A4/8 | Solid Tumors | ACTengine IMA201 genetically engineered T-cells (TCR-T) targeting MAGE-A4 or MAGE-A8 in patients with various solid tumors, including HNSCC, squamous NSCLC, subtypes of sarcoma and other solid tumor indications |
| Immatics | IMA202-101 | MAGE-A1 | Solid Tumors | ACTengine IMA202 genetically engineered T-cells (TCR-T) targeting MAGEA1 in patients with diverse solid tumors, including squamous NSCLC, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and others |
| Immatics | IMA203-101 | PRAME | Solid Tumors | ACTengine IMA203 genetically engineered T-cells (TCR-T) targeting PRAME in patients with a broad range of solid tumor types, including uterine cancer, ovarian cancer, melanoma, subtypes of sarcoma, squamous NSCLC and others |
| Juno | JTCR016 | WT1 | Stage III/IV NSCLC Mesothelioma | Autologous CD8 + T-cells genetically-modified to express a high affinity WT1-specific T-cell receptor targeting tumors in patients with stage III-IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) or mesothelioma |
| TCR2 Therapeutics | TC-210 | Mesothelin | Ovarian Cancer, NSCLC, MPM, Cholangiocarcinoma | TCR-based adoptive therapy which targets mesothelin-positive solid tumors. Mesothelin is highly expressed in solid tumors and has a correlation with poor prognosis and tumorigenesis |
| Tmunity | NY-ESO-1 TCR-T Triple Knockout TCR (NYCE) | NY-ESO-1 | Melanoma/Synovial Sarcoma | TCR-based adoptive therapy (NYCE) targeting NY-ESO-1 with designated target-binding capacity in melanoma and synovial sarcoma tumor types |
| Tmunity | H3.3K27M TCR | H3.3K27M | Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma | Human T-cells transduced with a TCR that specifically targets the H3.3.K27M epitope and kills HLA-A2 + H3.3.K27M + glioma cells both in vitro and in vivo |
| Ziopharm | Sleeping Beauty TCR-T Targeting Neoantigens | NY-ESO-1 Personalized TCR-T (3 programs) | Multiple Solid Tumors | Genetically modified TCR therapies that target neoantigens. Sleeping Beauty’s non-viral (transposon/transposase) gene transfer system is suited for developing genetically modified TCR therapies that target neoantigens because of its very rapid manufacturing capability |
Selected tumor markers used for TCR-based therapy, function, and tumor types associated with their overexpression
| Marker | Abbreviation | Function | Tumors associated with overexpression |
|---|---|---|---|
| AFP | Alpha Fetoprotein | Fetal development [ | Hepatocellular carcinoma [ |
| H3.3K27M | Histone H3 trimethylation | Histone protein associated with aberrant chromatin compaction and silencing of tumor suppressor genes [ | Prostate cancer [ |
| HPV-16 E6 | Human Papilloma Virus-16 E6 | Oncoprotein that disrupts p53 function | Head/neck [ |
| HPV-16 E7 | Human Papilloma Virus-16 E7 | Oncoprotein that disrupts pRB function | Head/neck [ |
| MAGE-A1 | Melanoma-associated antigen 1 | Embryonic development, transcriptional regulation [ | Non-small cell lung carcinoma [ |
| MAGE-A3 | Melanoma-associated antigen 3 | Enhancement of E3 ubiquitin ligase activity [ | Non-small cell lung carcinoma, melanoma [ |
| MAGE-A4 | Melanoma-associated antigen 4 | Embryonic development [ | Non-small cell lung carcinoma [ |
| MAGE-A6 | Melanoma-associated antigen 6 | Enhancement of E3 ubiquitin ligase activity [ | Breast [ |
| MAGE-A8 | Melanoma-associated antigen 8 | Embryonic development [ | Melanoma [ |
| MAGE-A10 | Melanoma-associated antigen 10 | Embryonic development [ | Non-small cell lung carcinoma, melanoma, urothelial [ |
| MCPyVs | Merkel cell polyoma virus (MCV oncoprotein) | Oncovirus integrates into infected cells | Merkel cell carcinoma [ |
| Mesothelin | – | Cellular adhesion [ | Mesothelioma [ |
| NY-ESO-1 | Cancer/testis antigen 1 | Embryonal development [ | Melanoma [ |
| PRAME | Preferentially expressed antigen in melanoma | Transcriptional repressor | Melanoma [ |
| WT-1 | Wilms tumor 1 | Urogenital development [ | Kidney [ |
Selected TCR-based clinical trials for solid tumors
| Sponsors/institutions | Indication | Treatment/target | Countries (# of sites) | NCT trial number |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adaptimmune | Solid tumors | MAGE-A4c1032T-cells | USA/Canada (9) | NCT03132922 |
| Adaptimmune | Solid tumors | ADP-A2M4CD8 cells | USA/Belgium/Canada/Spain (16) | NCT04044859 |
| Adaptimmune | Synovial sarcoma/myxoid liposarcoma | ADP-A2M4 cells | USA/France/Spain/UK (25) | NCT04044768 |
| Adaptimmune | HCC | AFPc332T-cells | USA/France/Spain/UK (20) | NCT03132792 |
| Adaptimmune | Solid tumors | MAGE A10c796T-cells | USA/Canada/Spain (11) | NCT02989064 |
| Adaptimmune | Ovarian cancer | NYESO-1c259T-cells | USA (5) | NCT01567891 |
| Adaptimmune | Melanoma | NY-ESO-1c259T-cells | USA (2) | NCT01350401 |
| Adaptimmune | NSCLC | MAGE A10c796T-cells | USA/Canada/Spain/UK (19) | NCT02592577 |
| Adaptimmune | Urothelial cancer, melanoma, head and neck cancer, urothelial carcinoma | MAGE A10c796T-cells | USA/Canada/Spain (11) | NCT02989064 |
| Bellicum Pharmaceuticals | AML, myelodysplastic syndrome, uveal melanoma | BPX-701 (PRAME-TCR) infusion | USA (3) | NCT02743611 |
| FHCRC | NSCLC, mesothelioma | WT1-TCRc4 gene-transduced CD8-positive Tcm/Tn Lymphocytes | USA (1) | NCT02408016 |
| FHCRC | Merkel cell cancer | FH-MCVA2TCR T-cells (MCPyV-Specific TCRs) | USA (1) | NCT03747484 |
| GlaxoSmithKline | Neoplasms | Anti-NY-ESO-1/LAGE-1a infusion | USA (25) | NCT03709706 |
| GlaxoSmithKline | Synovial sarcoma | NY-ESO-1c259 transduced T-cell infusion | USA (8) | NCT01343043 |
| GlaxoSmithKline | Solid tumors | GSK3377794 (NY-ESO-1 specific TCR engineered) infusion | USA/Canada/Spain/UK (15) | NCT03967223 |
FHCRC Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, NCI/NIH CC National Cancer Institute/National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, AML acute myeloid leukemia, GI gastrointestinal, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, NPC nasopharyngeal carcinoma, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer
Challenges, opportunities, and future directions
| Challenges | Current status | Opportunities/resolution |
|---|---|---|
| HLA Subtype Compatibility (HLA-A*02:01) | Therapies inclusive only to HLA-A*02:01 positive patients. Serotype is highly prevalent in Caucasian and native American populations yet low in other races and ethnicities | Broadening these therapies to multiple HLA genotypes and subtypes will increase the inclusivity and availability to a wider range of patients |
| Histological Biomarker Analyses | Costly and invasive tumor biopsy step needed to screen tumor tissue for confirmed expression of the targeted antigen | Develop new techniques to transcend current biopsy logistics and costs. Consider emerging circulating tumor cell techniques to identify target antigens |
| Identification and Selection of Target Antigens | Translational retroactive studies focusing on correlating data to identify suitable tumor antigens that are unique to a specific cancer and activate the immune response | Utilize bioinformatics technologies to develop predictive algorithms to identify effective target patient populations and tractable tumor antigens that enhance on-target, on-tumor immunocompetent responses and attenuate on-target off-tumor untoward effects |
| Leukapheresis Techniques and Manufacturing Starting Material | Current process is to extract and isolate PBMCs via standard apheresis techniques and utilized as the initial material for genetic modification | Advance apheresis techniques and improve autologous procedure technologies by enriching and activating T-cell subpopulations as the starting material |
| Temporal window from leukapheresis to product delivery | Current median times from leukapheresis to product delivery is 2–3 weeks | Augment and enhance the manufacturing, development, and delivery logistics processes to reduce the autologous extraction-to-infusion time frame |
| Pre-Infusion Lymphodepletion | Standard conditioning method supporting enhancement of engraftment and persistence of modified transferred T-cells | Fine tune and adapt the use of lymphodepletion agents to maximize immunocompetence and clinical benefit |
| Centralized Manufacturing/Processing Center | Present manufacturing methodology centralizes the preparation of TCR-based adoptive therapy at a core center to be subsequently returned and administered to the patient | Project to create regional or hospital-based centers where the extraction, modification, and infusion of the T-cell product occurs at the same location |
| Protracted Patient Follow-Up | Current regulatory guidance recommends patient follow-up for 15 years to screen for untoward long-term effects | Innovate post-administration safety assessments to efficiently monitor patients as well pioneering pre-infusion translational research studies that demonstrate the safety longevity of genetically-modified cells |
| Screening for optimal TCR affinity | Naturally occurring, tumor‐reactive T-cells might have poor efficacy because of the expression of low‐affinity TCRs | High affinity T-cells specific for candidate tumor antigens that are non-mutated self-antigens are likely candidates for such negative selection. Various strategies have been developed to enhance the affinity and the functional avidity of TCRs targeting tumor antigens. However, affinity‐enhanced TCRs might increase the risk of autoimmunity [ |
| Combination with checkpoint blockade | Immune checkpoint inhibitors, such as PD-1/PD-L1 and CTLA-4 along with other treatment modalities have been widely considered in the engineered TCR clinical trials | Approaches interfere with these inhibitory receptors are being tested to further enhance the antitumor activity of engineered T-cells [ |
| TCR-edited T-cells | The CRISPR-engineered T-cells may facilitate recognition of tumor cells by deleting the endogenous TCRs and PD-1 to reduce T-cell exhaustion | CRISPR-Cas9 technology was used in an example as a synthetic, cancer specific TCR transgene (NY-ESO-1) to facilitate recognition of tumor cells by the engineered T-cells. T-cells expressing NY-ESO-1 and lacking PD-1 and endogenous TCR have sustained in vivo expansion and persistence in a pilot phase I trial, suggesting additional tumor antigens may be required to see full tumor response [ |