| Literature DB >> 34372912 |
Yuanyuan Zheng1,2, Yan Li2, Jiao Feng2, Jingjing Li1,2, Jie Ji2, Liwei Wu2, Qiang Yu2, Weiqi Dai1,2, Jianye Wu3, Yingqun Zhou4, Chuanyong Guo5,6.
Abstract
Primary liver cancer (PLC) is a common malignancy with high morbidity and mortality. Poor prognosis and easy recurrence on PLC patients calls for optimizations of the current conventional treatments and the exploration of novel therapeutic strategies. For most malignancies, including PLC, immune cells play crucial roles in regulating tumor microenvironments and specifically recognizing tumor cells. Therefore, cellular based immunotherapy has its instinctive advantages in PLC therapy as a novel therapeutic strategy. From the active and passive immune perspectives, we introduced the cellular based immunotherapies for PLC in this review, covering both the lymphoid and myeloid cells. Then we briefly review the combined cellular immunotherapeutic approaches and the existing obstacles for PLC treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Cellular based immunotherapy; Combined immunotherapy; Lymphoid cell; Myeloid cell; Primary liver cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34372912 PMCID: PMC8351445 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-021-02030-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Cellular based immunotherapy in liver cancer. Based on myeloid or lymphoid immune cells, strategies are attempted for liver cancer therapy. In myeloid cell group, DC vaccine, engineered Mφ and depletion of immune suppressors are undergoing research for hepatoma treatment. For lymphoid cells, strategies such as T/NK cell engineering, Tregs/Bregs depletion and molecular regulatory intervenes are also under study. DC, dendritic cell; Mφ, macrophage; Tregs, regulatory T cells; Bregs, regulatory B cells; FOXP3, forkhead box protein P3; GITRL, ligand to Tregs evoked glucocorticoid induced tumor necrosis factor receptor; TCR-T, T cell receptor engineered T cells; CAR-T, chimeric antibody receptor engineered T Cells; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HLA-A2, human leukocyte antigen-A2; AFP, A-fetoprotein; GPC3, Glypican-3; NKG2D, NK group 2 member D; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; EGFRvIII, epidermal growth factor receptor variant III; TIM-1+, T cell immunoglobulin mucin domain-1 positive; PD-1, programmed cell death-1; CXCL9, chemokine C-X-C motif chemokine ligand-9; IL, interleukin; CD169, cluster of differentiation 169; CD44, cluster of differentiation 44; CD133, cluster of differentiation 133; CD40, cluster of differentiation 40; CD160, cluster of differentiation 160; CD96, cluster of differentiation 96; CD11b, cluster of differentiation 11b; CD27, cluster of differentiation 27; CD3, cluster of differentiation 3; DAP10, DNAX-activating protein 10
Clinical therapeutic trials for cell vaccines against PLC
| Vaccine catalog | Trial Phase | Enrolled patients backgrounds | Trial information | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | II | III | Number. | Location | intervention | comments | Identifier | Reference | |
| Allogeneic | 18 | Sweden | allogeneic dendritic cell vaccine (ilixadencel) | Safety; immunological response activated against HCC | NCT01974661 | [ | |||
| Autologous | I/IIa | 8/12 | China | autologous fixed HCC vaccine | Safety; recurrence delay for patients with HCC after operation | – | [ | ||
| 41 | China | autologous fixed HCC vaccine | Safety; recurrence rates reduced and overall survival rates improved for patients with HCC after operation | – | [ | ||||
| 8 | USA | bi-shRNAfurin/GM-CSF incorporated autologous HCC cell vaccine | Safety; immunological response activated against HCC and overall survival prolonged | – | [ | ||||
| - | 160 | China | autologous DC-tumor vaccine | Safety; recurrence and metastasis rates for postoperative HCC patients reduced; survival rates improved | – | [ | |||
| 10 | Japan | autologous tumor lysates pulsed DC vaccine | Safety; antitumor efficiency probably existed against PLC: delayed type hypersensitivity induced (7/10); tumor size shrinked (1/10); serum level of tumor marker decreased (2/10) | – | [ | ||||
| 31 | China | autologous tumor lysates pulsed DC vaccine | Safety; HCC patients’ survival better prolonged by boosters followed DCs therapy than single DCs vaccine itself | – | [ | ||||
| 36 | Japan | autologous tumor lysates pulsed DC vaccine | Survival for iCCA patients prolonged; prognosis improved | UMIN000005820 | [ | ||||
Abbreviations for the table: HCC Hepatocellular carcinoma, iCCA Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, DCs Dendritic cells, GM-CSF Granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor, USA United States of America
Fig. 2Tregs interact with immune cells and the therapies in liver cancer. Tregs suppress anti-liver cancer immunity via interacting with several immune cells. Firstly, Tregs inhibit APCs’ function in liver cancer, currently known mechanisms like CTLA-4 ligand expression to down-regulate DCs’ CD80/86 and IL-10 secretion to inhibit DCs maturation, TLR-4 signal mediated immune suppression with macrophage participant. And the APCs suppression may be rescued by drugs like cabozantinib and CTLA4 blockade. Secondly, Tregs suppress FOXP3− T cells in liver cancer such as effector T cell (consuming IL-2 with highly expressed CD25; PD-1 correlated dysregulation) and γδ T cell (depending on TGF β and IL-10), which can be partially blocked by GITRL therapy. And regulatory T cell itself can be depressed by CD4+CD25+ Tregs’ proportion decreaser solanine and FOXP3 expression inhibitor astragalus polysaccharides for liver cancer therapy. CTLA-4, cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated antigen-4; IL-2, interleukin-2; IL-10, interleukin-10; TLR-4, Toll like receptor-4; PD-1, programmed cell death-1; PD-L1, programmed cell death-ligand 1; TGF β, transforming growth factor β; GITRL, glucocorticoid induced tumor necrosis factor receptor ligand; CD25, cluster of differentiation 25
Clinical therapeutic trials for engineered T cells against PLC
| T cell engineering category | Trial Phase | Enrolled patients backgrounds | Trial information | Reference | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | II | III | Number. | Location | intervention | Antigen | comments | Identifier | ||
| TCR-T | 7/ NCT04677088 10/ NCT02686372 10/ NCT02719782 | China | HBV antigen specific TCR T cells | HBsAg | Safety; pulmonary metastases of HCC decreased; valuable prophylaxis against HCC relapse provided | NCT04677088 NCT02686372 NCT02719782 | [ | |||
| CAR-T | 30 | China | GPC3-CAR-T cells | GPC3 | HCC cells were eradicared and tumor growth was efficiently suppressed in PDX model | NCT03198546 | [ | |||
| 20 | China | HCC: CD133-CAR-T cells iCCA: Cocktail treatment comprised with VEGF-CAR-T, PD-1 monoclonal antibody and CD133-CAR-T | CD133 VEGF | Clinical outcomes of dvanced HCC patients improved with manageable safety profile by CD133-CAR-T; Advanced iCCA patient acquired 8.5-month and 4.5-month partial response from VEGF-CAR-T and CD133-CAR-T, respectively. | NCT02541370 | [ | ||||
Abbreviations for the table: TCR-T T cell receptor engineered T cells, CAR-T Chimeric antibody receptor engineered T Cells, GPC3 Glypican-3, CD133 Cluster of differentiation 133, VEGF Vascular endothelial growth factor, PD-1 Programmed cell death-1, HCC Hepatocellular carcinoma, iCCA Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma