| Literature DB >> 34295678 |
Jonas B Hess1,2, Kate D Sutherland1,2, Sarah A Best1,2.
Abstract
Cytotoxic immune cells are key in the control of tumor development and progression. Natural killer (NK) cells are the cytotoxic arm of the innate immune system with the capability to kill tumor cells and surveil tumor cell dissemination. As such, the interest in harnessing NK cells in tumor control is increasing in many solid tumor types, including lung cancer. Here, we review the pre-clinical models used to unveil the role of NK cells in immunosurveillance of solid tumors and highlight measures to enhance NK cell activity. Importantly, the development of NK immunotherapy is rapidly evolving. Enhancing the NK cell response can be achieved using two broad modalities: enhancing endogenous NK cell activity, or performing adoptive transfer of pre-activated NK cells to patients. Numerous clinical trials are evaluating the efficacy of NK cell immunotherapy in isolation or in combination with standard treatments, with encouraging initial results. Pre-clinical studies and early phase clinical trials suggest that patients with solid tumors, including lung cancer, have the potential to benefit from recent developments in NK cell immunotherapy. 2021 Translational Lung Cancer Research. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Natural killer cells (NK cells); immunosurveillance; lung cancer
Year: 2021 PMID: 34295678 PMCID: PMC8264324 DOI: 10.21037/tlcr-20-765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Lung Cancer Res ISSN: 2218-6751
Figure 1NK cell publication rate. (A) Publications describing ‘NK cells’ and ‘cancer’ since the initial discovery of NK cells in 1978. (B) Publications of ‘NK cells’ and melanoma (black), lung cancer (red) or pancreatic cancer (purple) since 1978. Data sourced from Web of Science.
Figure 2Tumor cell evasion and surveillance by NK cells. Primary tumor cells that metastasize harness mechanisms to actively evade immunosurveillance. This includes the secretion of TGF-β, expression of PD-L1 and MHC-I ligands, platelet association and the secretion of NKG2D ligands, inhibiting the NK cell cytotoxic response. Conversely, primary tumor cells that are effectively killed by NK cells express activating ligands to NK cell receptors through the upregulation of SASP and EMT gene regulation pathways (i.e., TNF-α, vimentin, m157) or downregulate the inhibitory ligand MHC-I, initiating lysis of target cells. TGF-β, transforming growth factor beta; PD-L1, programmed cell death ligand 1; MHC-I, major histocompatibility complex 1; SASP, senescence associated secretory phenotype; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor alpha; EMT, epithelial to mesenchymal transition; KIR, killer immunoglobulin-like receptor.
Murine models investigating NK cell activity in lung cancer
| Mouse model | Immune status | Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CB17SC-beige | No T, B, NK cells | EMT-induced A549 spontaneously metastasize | Reka |
| NOD scid gamma (NSG) | No T, B, NK cells | JQ1 and Ricolinostat combination treatment exhibited cytostatic effect in SCLC; required NK cells for tumor cell clearance | Liu |
|
| No T, B cells; perforin expression | Spontaneous metastasis of SCLC cells occurs in the | Sodeur |
|
| No T, B cells; NK cells depleted with anti-ASGM1 | EMT-induced A549 metastasize in NK depleted model only | Chockley |
| C57Bl/6 | Immune competent; NK cells depleted with anti-ASGM1 or anti-NK1.1 | Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cell line spontaneously metastasized in NK-depleted setting | Chockley |
|
| Deficient in perforin | No impact on subcutaneous growth of SCLC cells, significant increase in metastatic dissemination | Best, Hess |
|
| Immune competent; NK cells missing inhibitory feedback loop (94) | Enhanced control of metastatic dissemination in SCLC model | Best, Hess |
|
| No NK cells | Enhanced metastasis in LLC cell line | Cong |
|
| No NK cells (91) | No impact on subcutaneous growth of SCLC cells, significant increase in metastatic dissemination | Best, Hess |
|
| Immune competent; conditional deletion of TGFβRII on NK cells (34) | Enhanced control of metastatic dissemination in SCLC model | Best, Hess |
| Immune competent | NK cells decrease as lung adenocarcinoma develops | Best | |
| Immune competent; NK cells depleted with anti-NK1.1 | NK depletion did not impact lung adenocarcinoma development; NK cells localized to the tumor stroma | Schmidt | |
| Immune competent; NK cells depleted with anti-NK1.1 | Doxycycline induction of m157 resulted in increased NK cell infiltration, reversed by NK cell depletion. | Schmidt | |
| Immune competent; NK cells depleted with anti-NK1.1 | Trametinib and Palbociclib combination treatment induced senescence in tumors; NK cell dependent tumor cell death | Ruscetti |
Summary of selected clinical trials investigating NK cell-mediated treatment in cancer
| Tumor type | Phase | NCT identifier | NK Therapy | Combination | Enrolment | Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AML or MDS | I/II | NCT01898793 | CIML-NK infusion | ALT-803 | 140 | Planned endpoint: phase I: maximum tolerated dose of CIML-NK cells; phase II: Remission rate | Last update: August 2020 |
| AML | II | NCT02782546 | CIML-NK infusion | ALT-803 | 60 | Planned endpoint: leukemia free survival rate | Last update: August 2020 |
| Advanced AML | I | NCT01385423 | Haploidentical Donor NK cell therapy | Intravenous rhIL-15 | 26 | Observed outcome: 36% patients had robust | Cooley |
| AML | II | NCT02395822 | Haploidentical Donor NK cell therapy | Subcutaneous rhIL-15 | 17 | Observed outcome: NK cell expansion at day 14 was seen in 27% of the patients, and 40% achieved remission | Cooley |
| NSCLC | IB/II | NCT02523469 | ALT-803 | Nivolumab | 58 | Observed outcome: tolerable dose of IL-15 super-agonist established and first findings of activity of IL-15 treatment in NSCLC patients | Wrangle |
| Metastatic solid tumors | I | NCT03388632 | rhIL-15 | Nivolumab and/or Ipilimumab | 50 | Planned endpoint: safety, toxicity profile, dose-limiting toxicity and maximum tolerated dose | Last update: March 2020 |
| Relapsed/refractory mature T-cell malignancies | I | NCT03905135 | rhIL-15 | Avelumab | 30 | Planned endpoint: maximum tolerated dose | Last update: July 2020 |
| HCC | II | NCT01246986 | Galunisertib | None, Sorafenib or Ramucirumab | 204 | Observed outcome: Galunisertib was active in patients | Giannelli |
| Metastatic or locally advanced solid tumors | I | NCT02517398 | M7824 (anti-PD-L1/TGFβRII fusion protein) | – | 600 | Observed outcome: M7824 saturated peripheral PD-L1 and sequestered TGF-β1, 2 and 3 in the plasma, with early signs of tumor control | Strauss |
| Relapsed SCLC | II | NCT03554473 | M7824 (anti-PD-L1/TGFβRII fusion protein) | Topotecan or Temozolomide | 67 | Planned endpoint: efficacy (PR or CR) | Last update: August 2020 |
| Advanced NSCLC | III | NCT03631706 | M7824 (anti-PD-L1/TGFβRII fusion protein) | – | 584 | Planned endpoint: comparison to pembrolizumab—PFS and OS. | Last update: September 2020 |
| Metastatic HNSCC | IB/II | NCT02643550 | Anti-NKG2A | Cetuximab | 140 | Observed outcome: overall benefit, majority of patients responding favorably (31% PR, 54% stable disease) with an acceptable safety profile | Andre |
| Advanced solid tumors | I/II | NCT02671435 | Monalizumab | Duvalumab | 383 | Planned endpoint: drug limited toxicities, safety profile, ORR | Last update: July 2020 |
| Malignant solid tumors | I/II | NCT02843204 | Allogeneic adoptive transfer | Pembrolizumab | 110 | Observed endpoint: the addition of NK cell therapy improved outcome over Pembrolizumab on its own | Lin |
| Advanced solid tumors | I | N/A | IL-2 activated NK-92 cell line | – | 15 | Observed outcome: some lung cancer patients in trial responded to treatment | Tonn |
| HER2+ glioblastoma | I | NCT03383978 | NK-92/5.28.z cells: CAR-NK specific to HER2 | – | 30 | Planned endpoint: adverse events, maximum tolerated/feasible dose, period of detectability, cytokine profile | Last update: September 2020 |
| CD19+ B cell lymphoma | I | NCT03056339 | iC9/CAR.19/IL15-Transduced CB-NK cells: cord blood CAR-NK specific to CD19 | – | 11 | Observed outcome: 73% patients had a response; of these, 7 (4 with lymphoma and 3 with CLL) had a CR | Liu |
“Last update” refers to the website update on clinicaltrials.gov as of publication of this review. CR, complete response; PR, partial response; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; ORR, overall response rate; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; SCLC, small cell lung cancer; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; CIML, cytokine induced memory-like.