| Literature DB >> 34598713 |
Vincent Lemaire1, Colby S Shemesh2, Anand Rotte3,4.
Abstract
The success of antibodies targeting Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and its ligand L1 (PD-L1) in cancer treatment and the need for improving response rates has led to an increased demand for the development of combination therapies with anti-PD-1/PD-L1 blockers as a backbone. As more and more drugs with translational potential are identified, the number of clinical trials evaluating combinations has increased considerably and the demand to prioritize combinations having potential for success over the ones that are unlikely to be successful is rising. This review aims to address the unmet need to prioritize cancer immunotherapy combinations through comprehensive search of potential drugs and ranking them based on their mechanism of action, clinical efficacy and safety. As lung cancer is one of the most frequently studied cancer types, combinations that showed potential for the treatment of lung cancer were prioritized. A literature search was performed to identify drugs with potential in combination with PD-1/PD-L1 blockers and the drugs were ranked based on their mechanism of action and known clinical efficacy. Nineteen drugs or drug classes were identified from an internal list of lead molecules and were scored for their clinical potential. Efficacy and safety data from pivotal studies was summarized for the selected drugs. Further, overlap of mechanisms of action and adverse events was visualized using a heat map illustration to help screen drugs for combinations. The quantitative scoring methodology provided in this review could serve as a template for preliminary ranking of novel combinations.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Cancer immunotherapy; Clinical trials; Combination development; Pharmacology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34598713 PMCID: PMC8485537 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-021-02111-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Examples of key issues impacting development of cancer immunotherapy combinations
| Key Issues |
|---|
| 1. Exponential increase in number of potential targets/molecules for development |
| 2. Complex mechanisms of action, which may or may not have synergistic or additive interaction |
| 3. Need for guidance on dose, regimen and sequence of the combination |
| 4. Possibility of higher incidence of serious adverse events |
| 5. Possibility of combination being effective only in hematological tumors or in solid tumors |
| 6. Time lags in getting early data on dose, efficacy and safety |
| 7. Lack of clinical data to propose rational and quantitative assessments |
| 8. Need for strategies to apply combinations with the goal of turning ‘cold’ tumors into ‘hot’ |
| 9. Competitive pressure and speed of development |
Fig. 1Flow chart of the search and elimination process for selection of drugs of interest. *PD-1/PD-L1 class of drugs, were preselected as they are considered as the backbone for combination studies. The final number of drugs selected is 20 (19 + anti-PD-1/PD-L1)
Scoring methodology for the available information
| Yes/High (3) | Medium (2) | No/Low (1) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stage I screening | |||
| Clinical potential | Actively considered for clinical development with at least solid preclinical data | NA | Mainly in vitro data and < 5 studies showing preclinical evidence |
| Stage II screening | |||
| Relevance to immunotherapy | Directly activate immune system or known to have significant indirect effects on immune system | NA | Not known to directly or indirectly activate immune system |
| Stage III screening | |||
| Relevance of Indication | > 3 indications in solid tumors including NSCLC in clinical development | At least 3 indications in clinical development | < 3 indications in clinical development or heme indications only |
| Knowledge of MoA | Biology is clearly established with details of interactions at cellular and molecular levels | Biology is not clearly established with only few details on molecular interactions | Biology not known |
| Effects on immune response | Directly activate effector immune cells such as CD8 T-cells or NK cells | Act by stimulating the proliferation of immune cells or increasing the infiltration of immune cells into tumors | Indirectly activate immune system through antigen release |
| Stage IV screening | |||
| Availability of data | Efficacy and safety data validated in multiple clinical studies | NA | Limited clinical or only preclinical efficacy and safety data |
| Scoring of clinical data | |||
| Clinical efficacy data | Data available from combination with PD-1/PD-L1 blockers in solid tumors; Data from monotherapy in solid tumors and combination with chemotherapy in solid tumors | Only data from monotherapy; or only combination therapy in solid tumors is available | Only data from heme tumors and/or preclinical data is available |
| Other information summarized (not scored) | |||
| Setting | Adjuvant +/- or Adv/Metastatic 1-2 L or Adv/Metastatic 3-4 L+ | ||
| Combination studies | Combination studies with CIT or targeted therapy or with standard of care (e.g. chemotherapy) | ||
| Efficacy | Molecule/target active by itself in multiple indications or single indication or only in combination | ||
| Safety | Whether AEs manageable and reversible with treatment cessation or require additional treatment for reversal or require hospitalization and aggressive treatment for reversal Grade 3 or more incidence | ||
| Phase | Phase 1/2/3/4 or pre-clinical | ||
| Time to read out | < 1 years or 1–3 years or > 3 years | ||
Abbreviation: NA not applicable
Fig. 2Pie chart of molecule classification. Coloring is used to identify tumor type, and mechanism of action, with the inner sectors representing development stage. Drugs are classified using a hybrid of multiple components including development stage, tumor type, mechanism of action, and are bucketed as passive or active immunotherapies based on immune response activation. Passive immunotherapies include molecules expressed in low levels; they rectify deficient immune system typically used for patients with impotent immune systems. These could include the monoclonal antibodies targeting malignant cells, adoptive transfer of immune cells, adjuvants, recombinant cytokines, inhibitors of signaling pathways, delivery of cytotoxins, activators of ADCC, tumor antigen targeting, and oncolytic viruses; which typically require multiple administrations to be efficient. Active immunotherapies are designed to activate effector function of immune cells. These include activation of endogenous and long-lasting immune responses including vaccines, blockade by checkpoint inhibitors, oncolytic viruses, immunomodulatory mAbs, immunostimulatory cytokine adjuvants to augment immunotherapy response, mAbs to proinflammatory cytokines, immunogenic cell death inducers such as chemotherapies, and pattern recognition receptor agonists.
Fig. 3Flow chart showing the point of action for screened drugs. Tumor cell cytotoxicity is mainly achieved by effector T-cells and NK cells, which results in antigen release and reduction in tumor size. Release of antigens along with cellular components such as danger associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) result in maturation of DCs and macrophages, which present antigens and activate the T-cells, and promote their differentiation into effector T-cells. Tumor size is known to negatively affect the activity of effector T-cells and NK cells. Similarly, presence of immunosuppressor cells in tumor microenvironment and exhaustion have negative effects on the activity of effector T-cells and NK cells. Finally, decreased infiltration of effector T-cells and NK cells in the tumor also leads to decreased anti-tumor immune response. In the flow diagram, all the major processes that control the anti-tumor immune response are presented as nodes. (+) indicates positive effect of the molecule/target on the node and (-) indicates inhibitory effect of the molecule/target on the node
Fig. 4Heat map showing overlap of (A) Mechanism of action (B) Serious AEs and/or Grade 3 or above AEs for screened drugs (A) *chemotherapy has also been shown in some studies to downregulate PD-L1 and PD-L2 expression on DCs and induce cytotoxic activity of CTLs and NK cells, B * Early reports from clinical studies evaluating TIGIT did not report any dose limiting toxicities, except a case of grade 2 diarrhea. **Reduced blood cell count is used as a broad category of AEs and includes direct suppression of bone marrow generation of blood cells as well as indirect reductions in blood cell counts resulting in neutropenia, anemia, decreased lymphocyte count and thrombocytopenia. *** SAEs sorted in the ‘Others’ category are sometimes unique for the drug and cannot be combined as a single category. Early phase 1 studies for anti-Tim-3, anti-Lag-3, AB928 and Reolysin did not report serious adverse events but evidence from studies in larger cohort is not available and are represented accordingly (grey). Data includes rare events and may include AEs that are probably not related to study. ARF, acute renal failure; ALF, acute liver failure
Efficacy outcomes reported for screened drugs
| Compound | Efficacy as monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy or targeted therapy | Efficacy in combination with PD-1/PD-L1 blockers | Clinical status | Clinical score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ipilimumab | Monotherapy for unresected melanoma [Yervoy™ package insert]: ORR, 10.9 %; median OS, 10 months; HR for OS, 0.66 | Phase 4 and post market studies | 3 | |
| Tim-3 blockers | Efficacy data not available | Efficacy data not available | Multiple phase 2 studies | 1 |
| Lag-3 blockers | Efficacy data not available | Multiple phase 2 and phase 2/3 studies | 1 | |
| TIGIT blockers | Multiple phase 3 studies | 3 | ||
| Chemotherapy | Phase 4 and multiple post market studies | 3 | ||
| Bevacizumab | Multiple phase 3 studies | 3 | ||
| FAP-IL-2 V | Monotherapy* [ | Data not available | Multiple phase 3 studies | 2 |
| Cobimetinib | Multiple phase 3 studies | 3 | ||
| Imprime PGG | Phase 1 and Phase 2 studies | 3 | ||
| AM0010 | Monotherapy (RCC) [ | Phase 2 study | 3 | |
| BL8040 | Data not available | Multiple phase 1/2 studies | 2 | |
| Selicrelumab | Data not available | Multiple phase 1 studies | 3 | |
| Reolysin | Multiple phase 2 and phase 3 studies | 3 | ||
| Hu5F9G4 | Data not available | Multiple phase 1 studies | 2 | |
| Cabozatinib | Combination with nivolumab (RCC) [ | Multiple phase 3 studies | 3 | |
| AB928 | Combination with modified FOLFOX-6 (CRC) [ | Combination with chemotherapy or PD-1 blocker AB122 (solid tumors) [ | Multiple phase 1 studies | 2 |
| Niraparib | Monotherapy PRIMA (OC) [ QUADRA (OC) [ CRPC [ | Combination with pembrolizumab (TNBC) [ OC [ | Multiple phase 3 studies | 3 |
| Tocilizumab | Combination with chemotherapy and interferon-α2b (Ovarian Cancer) [ | Data not available | Multiple phase 1/2 studies | 2 |
| Isatuximab | Isatuximab is mainly studied in Heme cancers (multiple myeloma). Data in solid tumors is not available. | Combination with atezolizumab (CRC) [ | Multiple phase 3 studies | 1 |
Note: Solid tumors mainly NSCLC are preferentially reported over others. Unless otherwise indicated, data shown in the table are from studies in lung cancer patients. Data presented in the table represents the modified intent to treat population (mITT) where reported and is extracted from the posters of conferences and peer reviewed publications. Details on the Clinical Score in the Table 2: 3 is better, 1 is lower
Abbreviations: MAP metastatic adenocarcinoma of pancreas, PDAC pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, CRC colorectal cancer, TNBC triple negative breast cancer, OC ovarian cancer, CRPC castration-resistant prostate cancer