| Literature DB >> 34484202 |
Hillard M Lazarus1, Carolyn E Ragsdale2, Robert Peter Gale3, Gary H Lyman4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sargramostim [recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhu GM-CSF)] was approved by US FDA in 1991 to accelerate bone marrow recovery in diverse settings of bone marrow failure and is designated on the list of FDA Essential Medicines, Medical Countermeasures, and Critical Inputs. Other important biological activities including accelerating tissue repair and modulating host immunity to infection and cancer via the innate and adaptive immune systems are reported in pre-clinical models but incompletely studied in humans.Entities:
Keywords: GM-CSF; adaptive immune response; cancer; granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; immune modulation; immune therapy; innate immune response; sargramostim
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34484202 PMCID: PMC8416151 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.706186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Timeline for discovery and development of GM-CSF. AML, acute myeloid leukemia; BMT, bone marrow transplant; CSF, colony-stimulating factor; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; H-ARS, hematopoietic acute radiation syndrome; T-VEC, talimogene laherparepvec. (Modified from: Dougan M, Dranoff G, Dougan SK. GM-CSF, IL-3, and IL-5 family of cytokines: Regulators of Inflammation. Immunity. 2019;50(4):796‐811).
Labeled indications and investigational immunomodulatory uses for sargramostim.
| Approved Indications | Investigational Oncologic Uses | Investigational Non-oncologic Uses |
|---|---|---|
|
Shorten time to neutrophil recovery and reduce incidence of severe and life-threatening infections and infections resulting in death following induction chemotherapy in adult patients with AML Mobilization of hematopoietic progenitor cells into peripheral blood for leukapheresis and autologous transplantation in adult patients Acceleration of myeloid reconstitution following autologous BMT or peripheral blood progenitor cell transplantation Acceleration of myeloid reconstitution following allogeneic BMT Treatment of delayed neutrophil recovery or graft failure after autologous or allogeneic BMT Increase survival in patients acutely exposed to myelosuppressive doses of radiation (H-ARS) |
In combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors In combination with other biologics (e.g., for neuroblastoma) Direct intra- or perilesional injection into tumors (cutaneous melanoma) Tumor vaccines |
Adjunctive therapy for treatment of MDR refractory fungal and bacterial infections Associated with critical illnesses (e.g., sepsis, MODS) aPAP ARDS COVID-19 Non-cancer vaccines (e.g., hepatitis B) Parkinson disease Alzheimer disease |
Approved indications; see Leukine® prescribing information for details (6).
AML, acute myeloid leukemia; aPAP, autoimmune pulmonary alveolar proteinosis; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; BMT, bone marrow transplantation; COVID-19, novel coronavirus 2019; H-ARS, hematopoietic syndrome of acute radiation syndrome; MDR, multidrug-resistant; MODS, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome.
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram. PRISMA flow diagram. aIntervention not sargramostim (e.g., molgramostim) and/or not administered via intravenous or subcutaneous route; bExclusions comprised phase 1 trials and those that were not prospective, interventional, or observational studies (e.g., letter to the editor, retrospective studies, etc.); cExcluded studies were those assessing sargramostim for mobilization, as an adjuvant to vaccines or GM-CSF–expressing vaccines and studies supporting current FDA-approved indications.
Figure 3Hematopoietic cascade demonstrating the action of GM-CSF and G-CSF and the link between the innate and adaptive immune systems. This figure is a partial representation of the hematopoietic cascade. NK, natural killer. This figure was created using Servier Medical Art templates, which are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License; https://smart.servier.com.
Figure 4Immunobiology of GM-CSF. Ag, antigen; CTL, cytotoxic T lymphocytes; DC, dendritic cell; FcR, Fc receptor; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; PMN, polymorphonuclear neutrophils; TDLN, tumor-draining lymph node. This figure was created using Servier Medical Art templates, which are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License; https://smart.servier.com.
Figure 5GM-CSF reversal of immune paralysis (modified from Schulte-Schrepping 2020).
Clinical studies evaluating immune-enhancing effects of sargramostim in melanoma.
| Citation | Design/Patient Population | Treatment | Efficacy | Adverse Events | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spitler 2000 ( | Phase 2; Multicenter; Open-label; Matched historical controls | Sargramostim 125 µg/m2 SC d1-14 every 28d x 1 yr (or disease recurrence) | Increased OS and DFS with sargramostim | ||
| O’Day 2009 ( | Phase 2; Single arm; Multicenter Melanoma (metastatic; chemotherapy-naïve without CNS metastases; 68% M1c; N=133) | Induction biochemotherapy: cisplatin, vinblastine, dacarbazine, IL-2, IFN alfa-2b and sargramostim 500 µg SC d6-15 (or beyond) until ANC >5,000/µL then: | Hospitalizations for neutropenic fever: 3 | • No treatment-related or infection-related deaths | |
| Spitler 2009 ( | Phase 2; Single arm; Open label; Multicenter Melanoma (surgically resected, stage II [T4], III, or IV; N=98; 44% failed previous adjuvant therapy) | Sargramostim 125 µg/m2 SC d1-14 of 28-d cycle for 3 yr or disease recurrence | Median melanoma-specific survival not yet reached (median follow-up of 5.3 yr) | ||
| Eroglu 2011 ( | Phase 2; Single arm Melanoma (stage IV; N=52; 81% Stage M1c; brain metastases 21%) | Docetaxel and vinorelbine on d1 and sargramostim 250 µg/m2 SC on d2-12 of 14-d cycles | Median OS 11.4 mo and PFS 4.8 mo | ||
| Hodi 2014 ( | Phase 2; Randomized Melanoma (unresectable stage III/IV; N=245) | Ipilimumab 10 mg/kg IV d1 + sargramostim 250 µg SC on d1-14 of 21-d cycles | • Increased OS with sargramostim | ||
| Andtbacka 2015 ( | Phase 3 Randomized; Open-label; Multicenter; Melanoma (unresectable stage IIIB-IV; N=436) | Sargramostim 125 µg/m2/day SC for 14 d in 28-d cycles | • OS favored T-VEC |
T-VEC (talimogene laherparepvec): herpes simplex virus type 1–derived oncolytic immunotherapy designed to selectively replicate within tumors and produce GM-CSF to enhance systemic antitumor immune responses.
AE, adverse event; CR, complete response; d, day(s); DFS, disease-free survival; GI, gastrointestinal; IFN, interferon; IV, intravenous; mo, month; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival; PR, partial response; SC, subcutaneous; TEAE, treatment-emergent adverse event; TRAE, treatment-related adverse event; NS, not significant; wk, week.
Clinical studies evaluating immune-enhancing effects of sargramostim in neuroblastoma.
| Citation | Design/Patient Population | Treatment | Efficacy | Adverse Events | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yu 2010 ( | Phase 3; Randomized Neuroblastoma (newly diagnosed, high-risk with ≥PR after induction, myeloablative consolidation with hematopoietic cell rescue; N=226) | Post-consolidation therapy (28d cycles x 6): Standard chemotherapy: isotretinoin |
2-yr event-free survival 66 ± 5% 2-yr OS 86 ± 4% | Grade 3-4 TEAE >10% Neuropathic pain 52% Hypotension 18% Hypoxemia 18% Non-neutropenic fever 39% Infection 39% Catheter-related infection 13% Hypersensitivity reactions 25% Capillary leak syndrome 23% Urticaria 13% Diarrhea 13% Hyponatremia 23% Hypokalemia 35% Increase ALT 23% & AST 10% | Immunotherapy + sargramostim provided superior event-free survival and OS but greater incidence ≥ gr 3 AE |
| Cheung 2012 ( | Phase 2; Single arm Neuroblastoma (disease status at study entry: primary/secondary refractory neuroblastoma; N=151) | Sargramostim 250 µg/m2 SC on d-5 to d1 then sargramostim 500 µg/m2 SC on d2-4 plus 3F8a d0-d4 plus Isotretinoin added cycles 4-10 |
CBRM1/5 (granulocyte activation marker) increased from 43.6% d0 to 67.2% d4 (p <.0001) Change in frequency and mean fluorescence intensity of CBRM1/5-positive granulocytes correlated with PFS (p = .024 and p = .008) | No AE reported | Sargramostim–induced granulocyte activation |
| During cycle 4: Sargramostim given 250-500 µg/m2 IV d0-4 | |||||
| Cheung 2014 ( | Phase 2; Single arm | Sargramostim 250 µg/m2 SC x 5d then 3F8a + sargramostim 250 µg/m2 SC x 2d then sargramostim 500 µg/m2 + 3F8a x 3d (n = 79) |
5-yr PFS 24 ± 6% 5-yr OS 65 ± 6% 53% (of n = 40 MRD at enrollment) turned MRD negative after cycle 2 of sargramostim + biotherapy Overall complete remission: 3F8 + SC sargramostim: 68% 3F8 + IV sargramostim: 65% |
Grade 1-2 pain and urticaria |
Increased PFS with SC Correlation improvement in MRD with PFS |
| Primary refractory neuroblastoma in bone marrow | |||||
| Comparison historic control | |||||
| Neuroblastoma (N=105) | Historic control with IV sargramostim (n = 26) | ||||
| Ozkaynak 2018 ( | Phase 2; Single arm | Post-consolidation therapy (28d cycles): Immunotherapy + sargramostim: isotretinoin x 6 cycles + dinutuximab + alternating sargramostim 250 µg/m2/d SC or IV for 14d and IL-2 x 5 cycles |
3-yr EFS 67.6 ± 4.8% 3-yr OS 79.1 ± 4.2% |
Most common grade 3 or higher non-hematologic toxicities of immunotherapy were neuropathic pain, fever, hypotension, allergic reaction, capillary leak syndrome. | AE generally resolved within 3d |
| Neuroblastoma (newly- diagnosed, high-risk with ≥partial remission after induction, myeloablative consolidation with hematopoietic cell rescue; N=105) |
3F8 is an anti-GD2 monoclonal antibody.
AE, adverse events; d, day(s); EFS, event-free survival; IV, intravenous; IL-2, interleukin-2; MRD, minimal residual disease; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival; PR, partial response; SC, subcutaneous; TEAE, treatment-emergent adverse event; TRAE, treatment-related adverse event.
Clinical studies evaluating immune-enhancing effects of sargramostim in prostate, colorectal and ovarian cancers.
| Citation | Design/Patient Population | Treatment | Efficacy | Adverse Events | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aggarwal 2015 ( | Phase 2; Randomized; Multicenter Prostate adenocarcinoma (metastatic castration resistant; N=125) | Maintenance sargramostim 250 µg/m2a SC (500 µg | • 7 of 27 patients discontinued participation during sargramostim therapy | Delayed time to disease progression with sargramostim | |
| Treatment with docetaxel + prednisone x 6 cycles with PSA response (≥50% decline): n = 52/125 (42%) randomized to maintenance | |||||
| Correale 2014 ( | Phase 3; Randomized; Open-label; Multicenter | GOLFIG (includes sargramostim 100 µg SC d3–7) | Increased PFS and OS with GOLFIG (sargramostim-containing regimen) | ||
| Colorectal cancer (metastatic, chemotherapy-naïve; N=120) | |||||
| Schmeler 2009 ( | Phase 2: Single arm Ovarian, fallopian tube and primary peritoneal cancer (recurrent, platinum-sensitive; N=59) | Carboplatin plus sargramostim 400-600 µg daily SC x two 7d courses (one preceding and one 24-36h after carboplatin) plus rIFN-γ1b 100 µg d5 & 7 of each 7d cycle of sargramostim | Response rate increased compared to other single-agent carboplatin trials |
Publication lists sargramostim dose as 250 mg/m2.
Note discrepancy in published manuscript.
d, day(s); FOLFOX-4, 5-fluorouracil, levofolinate, oxaliplatin; GOLFIG, gemcitabine, oxaliplatin, levofolinate, 5-fluorouracil, IL-2, GM-CSF; mo, month(s); NS, not significant; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; rIFN-γ1b, recombinant interferon, gamma 1b; SC, subcutaneous; TEAE, treatment-emergent adverse event; TRAE, treatment-related adverse event.
Clinical studies evaluating immune-enhancing effects of sargramostim in hematologic malignancies (AML, CML, CLL).
| Citation | Design/Patient Population | Treatment | Efficacy | Adverse Events | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rowe 2004 ( | Phase 3; Randomized; Double- blind; Placebo-controlled; Multicenter AML (n=362) | Induction therapy plus priming with: Sargramostim 250 µg/m2 SC daily | Not reported | 4- to 5-day delay in beginning induction chemotherapy due to sargramostim priming and randomization process | |
| Two randomizations: 1 - Induction therapy: daunorubicin, idarubicin, or mitoxantrone with cytarabine 2 - Priming: N=245 randomized to sargramostim or placebo | Then open label sargramostim 250 µg/m2/day SC until ANC ≥1500/µL x 3d, and 5d post-consolidation, sargramostim 250 µg/m2/day SC until ANC ≥1,500/µL for 3d | ||||
| Cortes 2011 ( | Phase 2; Randomized CML (<12 mo from diagnosis, Philadelphia-chromosome positive, chronic phase, n=94) | High-dose imatinib x 6 months, then PEG IFN α-2b + sargramostim 125 µg/m2 thrice weekly + high-dose imatinib | Sargramostim discontinued in all patients due to TEAE | Increased AE in sargramostim + PEG-IFN + high-dose imatinib compared to high-dose imatinib alone necessitated discontinuation sargramostim limiting study conclusions | |
| Strati 2014 ( | Phase 2; Single arm CLL (frontline, n = 60) | FCR plus sargramostim 250 µg/m2 SC on d −1 and d5–11 of course 1 and on d −1 and d4–10 of courses 2–6 | • Grade 3-4 neutropenia 83% | Compared to historic controls, fewer infections with addition sargramostim, 15% |
AE, adverse event; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; ANC, absolute neutrophil count; CLL, chronic lymphocytic leukemia; CML; chronic myelogenous leukemia; d, day(s); DFS, disease-free survival; FCR, fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, rituximab; mo, month(s); OS, overall survival; PEG IFN α-2b, peglyated interferon alpha-2b; PFS, progression-free survival; SC, subcutaneous; TEAE, treatment-emergent adverse event.
Sargramostim attenuation of adverse events of concurrent treatments.
| Citation | Patient Population | N | Sargramostim Treatment | Adverse Events (Sargramostim Arm | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hodi 2014 ( | Melanoma (unresectable stage III/IV) | 245 | Ipilimumab + sargramostim 250 µg/d SC d1-14 of each 21-d cycle | • Grade 3-5 overall adverse events: 45% | • 0.04 |
| Rowe 1995 ( | AML undergoing induction chemotherapy with daunorubicin and cytosine arabinoside | 124 | 250 µg/m2/day IV over 4 hr until ANC ≥ 1500/µL x 3d (consecutive) or for maximum of 42d | • Death from infection: 6% | • 0.019 |
| Nemunaitis 1995 ( | Allogeneic BMT for various lymphoid neoplasias | 109 | 250 µg/m2/day IV over 4 hr x 20d | • Infection rate: 64% | • 0.001 |
| Nemunaitis 1991 ( | Autologous BMT for various lymphoid neoplasias | 128 | 250 µg/m2/day IV over 2 hr x 21d | • Infection during first 28d: 17% | • NS |
| Nemunaitis 1990 ( | Graft failure following BMT for cancer or aplastic anemia | 37 | 60–1000 µg/m2/day IV over 2 hr x 14–21d | • Death rate due to infection: 21% | • NR |
Only 3.1% of sargramostim-treated patients had infections other than with streptococcus compared with 19.0% of placebo patients (P = 0.004). On the sargramostim arm the only bacterial infection was streptococcal bacteremia, whereas multiple pathogens (streptococcal, staphylococcal, fuso-bacterium and Corynebacterium bacteremia; staphylococcal cellulitis; legionella pneumonia) were detected in patients on the placebo arm.
AML, acute myelogenous leukemia; ANC, absolute neutrophil count; BMT, bone marrow transplantation; d, day(s); GI, gastrointestinal; hr, hour; IV, intravenous; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; SC, subcutaneous.