| Literature DB >> 34830221 |
Sara Nava1, Daniela Lisini1, Simona Frigerio1, Anna Bersano1.
Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs) are immune specialized cells playing a critical role in promoting immune response against antigens, and may represent important targets for therapeutic interventions in cancer. DCs can be stimulated ex vivo with pro-inflammatory molecules and loaded with tumor-specific antigen(s). Protocols describing the specific details of DCs vaccination manufacturing vary widely, but regardless of the employed protocol, the DCs vaccination safety and its ability to induce antitumor responses is clearly established. Many years of studies have focused on the ability of DCs to provide overall survival benefits at least for a selection of cancer patients. Lessons learned from early trials lead to the hypothesis that, to improve the efficacy of DCs-based immunotherapy, this should be combined with other treatments. Thus, the vaccine's ultimate role may lie in the combinatorial approaches of DCs-based immunotherapy with chemotherapy and radiotherapy, more than in monotherapy. In this review, we address some key questions regarding the integration of DCs vaccination with multimodality therapy approaches for cancer treatment paradigms.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvant therapy; cancer; dendritic cells; immunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34830221 PMCID: PMC8620771 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222212339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Combined therapy. Tumor escape mechanisms often inhibit the effect of dendritic cell vaccination. Conventional therapies such as chemo/radiotherapy can collaborate with DCs vaccination, promoting the activation of immune cells effectors and hampering the functions of immunosuppressive cells. Other innovative strategies are under investigation as a support to contrast tumor immune escape, such as inhibitors of Tregs and MDSCs; ICI, adoptive cells therapies and preconditioning of the pre-vaccine injection site.
Adjuvant Dendritic Cell Immunotherapy trials for cancer treatment.
| Description | N. of Trials | Disease(s) | Status | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DCs based adjuvant therapy versus standard of care (radio/chemotherapy) | 79 | 24 Brain tumors; 13 Melanoma; 12 Breast Cancer; 6 Liver/colo-rectal cancer; 4 pancreatic cancer; 20 other. | 15 Recruiting; 19 Not (yet) recruiting; 38 completed/terminated; 7 Unknown/withdrawn | 3 in phase 3; other phase 1, 2 |
| DCs based adjuvant therapy plus ICI | 42 | 11 Melanoma; 3 brain tumor; 4 Gastric cancer; 4 lung cancer; 3 pancreatic cancers; 5 Myeloma/Lymphoma; 12 other | 15 Recruiting; 9 Not (yet) recruiting; 12 completed/terminated; 6 Unknown/withdrawn | 5 in phase 3/4; other phase 1, 2 |
| DCs based adjuvant therapy plus other adoptive cells therapy | 29 | 6 Brain tumors; 3 Melanoma; 1 lung; 7 epato/gastrict tract cancer; 4 Myeloma/Lymphoma; 8 other | 8 Recruiting; 4 Not (yet) recruiting; 5 completed/terminated; 12 Unknown/withdrawn | 2 in phase 3; other phase 1, 2 |
Searching on clinicaltrial.gov (accessed on 5 November 2021) using the keywords “dendritic cells”, “adjuvant therapy” and “cancer” led to 150 results. The majority of trials (79) involve the use of DCs as an adjuvant therapy in combination with the standard of care; 42 trials out of 150 used DCs in addiction to ICI; 29 trials used DCs with other adoptive cells therapies. Most of the trials focus on diseases such as brain tumors (33) and melanoma (27), followed by myeloma/lymphoma (16) breast cancer (12), liver/colon-rectal cancer (six), gastric cancer (11), pancreatic (seven) and lung cancer (five). The majority of trials are in early phase (1, 2) only 10 out of 150 are in phase 3 or 4. The complete list of trials is reported in Supplementary Materials Table S1.