| Literature DB >> 34372501 |
Yogesh R Suryawanshi1, Autumn J Schulze1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma is one of the most difficult tumor types to treat with conventional therapy options like tumor debulking and chemo- and radiotherapy. Immunotherapeutic agents like oncolytic viruses, immune checkpoint inhibitors, and chimeric antigen receptor T cells have revolutionized cancer therapy, but their success in glioblastoma remains limited and further optimization of immunotherapies is needed. Several oncolytic viruses have demonstrated the ability to infect tumors and trigger anti-tumor immune responses in malignant glioma patients. Leading the pack, oncolytic herpesvirus, first in its class, awaits an approval for treating malignant glioma from MHLW, the federal authority of Japan. Nevertheless, some major hurdles like the blood-brain barrier, the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, and tumor heterogeneity can engender suboptimal efficacy in malignant glioma. In this review, we discuss the current status of malignant glioma therapies with a focus on oncolytic viruses in clinical trials. Furthermore, we discuss the obstacles faced by oncolytic viruses in malignant glioma patients and strategies that are being used to overcome these limitations to (1) optimize delivery of oncolytic viruses beyond the blood-brain barrier; (2) trigger inflammatory immune responses in and around tumors; and (3) use multimodal therapies in combination to tackle tumor heterogeneity, with an end goal of optimizing the therapeutic outcome of oncolytic virotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: blood–brain barrier; glioblastoma; oncolytic virus; tumor heterogeneity; tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34372501 PMCID: PMC8310195 DOI: 10.3390/v13071294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Oncolytic viruses in clinical trials for treatment of malignant glioma.
| Virus | Modification | Phase | Status | Reference | Route of Delivery | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSV-1 | G207 | Deletions at both | I & II | Completed | NCT00028158 | i.t./tumor resection cavity | No toxicity or serious adverse events. |
| Ib | Completed | [ | i.t. | No neurological adverse events after multiple virus dosages. | |||
| I | Active, not recruiting | NCT02457845 | i.t. | ||||
| II | Not yet recruiting | NCT04482933 | i.t. | ||||
| G47Δ | G207 with triple mutations | I-IIa | Completed | UMIN000002661 | i.t. | No toxicity or serious adverse events. | |
| II | Ongoing | UMIN000015995 | i.t. | No toxicity with 1-year survival rate of 92.3% in 13 patients. | |||
| rQNestin34.5v.2 | Glioma-selective transcriptional regulator for expression of | I | Recruiting | NCT03152318 | i.t. | ||
| HSV-1 | M032 | Deletions at both | I | Recruiting | NCT02062827 | i.t. | |
| C134 | Deletions at both | I | Active, not recruiting | NCT03657576 | i.t. | ||
| HSV-1716 | Deletion of both copies of | I | Completed | [ | i.t. | No adverse effects with 4 out of 9 patients surviving 14–24 months after virotherapy. | |
| I | Completed | [ | Tumor resection cavity | No toxicity with 3 out of 12 patients surviving over a year. | |||
| I | Terminated | NCT02031965 | i.t. | NA | |||
| Adeno-virus | DNX-2401 | Deletion of 24 base pairs from | I | Completed | NCT00805376 | i.t. | No dose-limiting virus toxicities reported with enhanced long-term survival and T cell response to tumors. |
| I | Active, not recruiting | NCT03178032 | Tumor resection cavity | ||||
| Adeno-virus | DNX-2401 | Deletion of 24 base pairs from | I | Completed | NCT01582516 | i.t. | NA |
| I | Completed | NCT01956734 | i.t. | NA | |||
| I | Completed | NCT02197169 | i.t. | NA | |||
| I | Recruiting | NCT03896568 | i.a. | ||||
| II | Active, not recruiting | NCT02798406 | i.t. | ||||
| DNX-2440 | DNX-2401 expressing OX40L | I | Recruiting | NCT03714334 | i.t. | ||
| NSC-CRAd-Survivin-pk7 | I | Active, not recruiting | NCT03072134 | i.t. | |||
| ONYX-015 | E1B-attenuated adenovirus | I | Completed | [ | Tumor resection cavity | No serious adverse effects with 1010 pfu of virus; among 24 patients, 1 patient each showed no progression and regression. | |
| Vaccinia | TG6002 | Deletions of | I/II | Recruiting | NCT03294486 | i.v. | |
| Reovirus | Reolysin | None | I | Completed | NCT00528684 | i.t. | No dose-limiting toxicity even with the highest does of 1X1010 TCID50. |
| I | Completed | [ | i.t. | No high-grade adverse effects. | |||
| Ib | Completed | [ | i.v. | Reovirus is capable of infecting glioma tumors when injected i.v. and increases cytotoxic T cell infiltration in tumors. | |||
| Reovirus + | I | Active, not recruiting | NCT02444546 | i.v. | |||
| Parvovirus H-1 | H-1PV | I/II | Completed | NCT01301430 | i.v. or i.t. + tumor resection cavity | Virus was safe and well-tolerated. Induced cytotoxic T cell response. | |
| I/IIa | Completed | [ | i.t./i.v. | Enhanced immune response and improved median survival. | |||
| Poliovirus | PVSRIPO | Poliovirus IRES switched with HRV2 IRES | I | Recruiting | NCT03043391 | i.t. | |
| I | Active, not recruiting | NCT01491893 | i.t. | Improved survival rate with no neurovirulence. | |||
| II | Active, not recruiting | NCT02986178 | i.t. | ||||
| Measles Virus | MV-CEA | Measles virus expressing CEA | I | Completed | NCT00390299 | Tumor resection cavity | NA |
| Retroviral vector | Toca511 | Replicating retroviral vector expressing cytosine deaminase | I | Completed | NCT01470794 | Tumor resection cavity | Durable response rate in subgroup of malignant glioma patients. |
| I | Completed | NCT01156584 | i.t/i.v. | NA | |||
| II & III | Terminated | NCT02414165 | Tumor resection cavity | Failed to improve survival and meet other efficacy endpoints. | |||
| Newcastle disease virus | NDV-HUJ strain | Mutation at F1-F2 junction | I/II | Completed | [ | i.v. | No severe toxicity with complete remission in 1 patient. |
| MTH-68/H | I | Completed | [ | i.v. | No adverse effects with improved survival of 4–9 years in 4 patients. |
Abbreviations: IL-12, interleukin-12; HMCV, human cytomegalovirus; HRV2, human rhinovirus type 2; IRES, internal ribosome entry site.; CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; i.t., intratumoral; i.v., intravenous; i.t.; NA, not available.
Figure 1Overview of hurdles to oncolytic virotherapy in malignant glioma. (A) Neutralization and non-specific filtration of virus. Systemically administered oncolytic viruses are prone to complement and antibody-mediated neutralization and uptake by phagocytic macrophages. Virus particles are further non-specifically filtered in lungs, liver, spleen, and other tissues as they pass through them reducing the overall number of virus particles that reach tumors. (B) Blood–brain barrier. Transportation across blood vessels into the brain tissue is tightly regulated by specialized perivascular architecture of cells, known as the blood–brain barrier, which also hinders transport of oncolytic viruses to tumors within the central nervous system compartment, thereby reducing the virus load delivered into tumors. (C) Immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Immunosuppressive cells like M2 phenotype microglia/macrophages, myeloid-derived suppressor cells, regulatory T cells are upregulated and maintained because of high levels of tumor necrosis factor (TGF)-β and indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) expressed by tumor cells, which form a tumor-protective surrounding around a tumor (This is an original figure created with biorender.com (accessed on 30 April 2021)).