| Literature DB >> 34885169 |
Janina Świderska1, Mateusz Kozłowski1, Sebastian Kwiatkowski2, Aneta Cymbaluk-Płoska1.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is one of the most fatal cancers in women worldwide. Cytoreductive surgery combined with platinum-based chemotherapy has been the current first-line treatment standard. Nevertheless, ovarian cancer appears to have a high recurrence rate and mortality. Immunological processes play a significant role in tumorigenesis. The production of ligands for checkpoint receptors can be a very effective, and undesirable, immunosuppressive mechanism for cancers. The CTLA-4 protein, as well as the PD-1 receptor and its PD-L1 ligand, are among the better-known components of the control points. The aim of this paper was to review current research on immunotherapy in the treatment of ovarian cancer. The authors specifically considered immune checkpoints molecules such as PD-1/PDL-1 as targets for immunotherapy. We found that immune checkpoint-inhibitor therapy does not have an improved prognosis in ovarian cancer; although early trials showed that a combination of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy with targeted therapy might have the potential to improve responses and outcomes in selected patients. However, we must wait for the final results of the trials. It seems important to identify a group of patients who could benefit significantly from treatment with immune checkpoints inhibitors. However, despite numerous trials, ICIs have not become part of routine clinical practice for the treatment of ovarian cancer.Entities:
Keywords: PD-1; PDL-1; checkpoint inhibitor; immune checkpoint; immunotherapy; ovarian cancer
Year: 2021 PMID: 34885169 PMCID: PMC8656861 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13236063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Classification of immunotherapy of ovarian cancer based on the innate and adaptive immune system.
Figure 2Scheme of the process of adoptive cell therapy.
Figure 3Scheme of the process of CAR-T therapy.
Phase I or phase II studies in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer.
| Study Title | Study Drug | Study Type | No. of Patients | Previous Chemotherapy Lines | Treatment Response | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR | PR | SD | CR | Disease Control | Median PFS | Median OS | |||||
| KEYNOTE-28 | Pembrolysumab | Phase 1b | 26 | 0–>5 | 3.8% | 7.7% | 26.9% | 11.5% | 38.4% | 1.9 | 13.8 |
| KEYNOTE-100 | Pembrolysumab (Humanized IgG4) | Phase II study | 376 | 1–6 | 1.9% | 6.1% | 29.3% | 8% | 37% | 2.1 | Not achieved |
| UMIN000005714 | Nivolumab (Human IgG4) | Phase II study | 20 | >2 | 10% | 5% | 30% | 15% | 45% | 3.5 | 20 |
| JAVELIN Solid Tumor Trial | Avelumab (Fully Humanized IgG1) | Phase 1b | 125 | n.a. | 0.8% | 8.8% | 42.2% | 9.6% | 51.8% | 2.6 | 11.2 |
CR—complete response, PR—partial response, SD—stable disease, PFS—progression-free survival, OS—overall survival, n.a.—not applicable.
Completed clinical studies including polytherapy in patients with ovarian cancer.
| Trial | CI + PARPi | N | Population | ORR (%) | DCR (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02484404 | Durvalumab + Olaparib | 35 | Platinum resistant 83% | 14 | 37 | Lee et al., ESMO 2018 [ |
| MEDIOLA | Durvalumab + Olaparib | 34 | gBRCAm, platinum sensitive | 71.9 | 80 at 12 weeks | Drew et al., ESMO 2019 [ |
| Durvalumab + Olaparib+ Bevacizumab | 32 | gBRCA WT platinum sensitive | 28.1 at 24 weeks | Drew et al. ESMO 2020 [ | ||
| 31 | gBRCA WT platinum sensitive | 87.1 | 77.4 at 24 weeks | |||
| TOPACIO/Keynote-162 | Pembrolizumab + Niraparib | 62 | Platinum –resistant or platinum unable | 18 | 65 | Konstantinopoulos et al., Jama Oncol 2019 [ |
ORR—objective response rate, DCR—disease control rate.
Phase 3 clinical trials in patients with ovarian cancer.
| Study Title or Number | Enrolled Patients | Study Treatment | Study Endpoints | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JAVELIN OVARIAN PARP 100 | Patients with locally advanced or metastatic ovarian cancer |
chemotherapy + avelumab (Anti-PD-L1) followed by maintenance treatment with avelumab (Anti-PD-L1)and thalasoparib chemotherapy followed by maintenance treatment with thalasoparib chemotherapy + bevacizumab followed by maintenance treatment with bevacizumab | PFS | Enrollment stopped after JAVELIN Ovarian 100 study results were presented; the expected efficacy of avelumab in the first-line treatment of non-preselected patient population was not achieved. |
| DUO-O | Newly diagnosed patients with ovarian cancer, primary peritoneal cancer, or fallopian tube cancer. |
platinum-based chemotherapy + bevacizumab followed by maintenance treatment with bevacizumab and olaparib. platinum-based chemotherapy + bevacizumab + durvalumab (Humanized IgG1) followed by maintenance treatment with bevacizumab and durvalumab (Humanized IgG1). platinum-based chemotherapy + bevacizumab + durvalumab (Humanized IgG1) followed by maintenance treatment with bevacizumab, durvalumab (Humanized IgG1), and olaparib. in tBRCAm patients: platinum-based chemotherapy + bevacizumab + durvalumab (Humanized IgG1) followed by maintenance treatment with bevacizumab, durvalumab (Humanized IgG1), and olaparib. | Primary: PFS | Randomized, quadruple-blinded, placebo-controlled. |
| ATHENA | Newly diagnosed patients with epithelial ovarian cancer, primary peritoneal cancer, or fallopian tube cancer who had achieved complete or partial response to the first line of chemotherapy | Maintenance treatment: rucaparib + nivolumab (Human IgG4) rucaparib nivolumab (Human IgG4) placebo | Primary: | Randomized, quadruple-blinded, placebo-controlled. |
| NCT02839707 | Patients with recurrent ovarian cancer/primary peritoneal cancer/fallopian tube cancer |
Pegylated lysosomal doxorubicin + atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k) Pegylated lysosomal doxorubicin + atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k) + bevacizumab Pegylated lysosomal doxorubicin + bevacizumab | Primary: | Phase II and phase III study. |
| IMagyn050 | Patients with newly diagnosed ovarian cancer, fallopian tube cancer, or peritoneal cancer |
Paclitaxel + carboplatin + atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k) + bevacizumab, followed by maintenance therapy with atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k)+ bevacizumab Paclitaxel + carboplatin + bevacizumab, followed by maintenance therapy with bevacizumab | Primary: | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial. |
| ANITA | Patients with recurrent, platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer. |
Platinum-based chemotherapy with subsequent maintenance niraparib Platinum-based chemotherapy + atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k) with subsequent maintenance niraparib + atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k) | Primary: | Randomized, triple-blinded, placebo-controlled. |
| ATLANTE | Patients with platinum-sensitive recurrence of epithelial ovarian cancer, primary peritoneal cancer, or fallopian tube cancer. |
Platinum-based chemotherapy + Avastin Platinum-based chemotherapy + Avastin + atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k ) with subsequent maintenance atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k) | Primary: | Randomized, triple-blinded. |
| NCT03353831 | Patients with first or second recurrence of ovarian cancer, Fallopian tube cancer or primary peritoneal cancer within <6 months since the last treatment. Along with patients with third disease recurrence. |
Chemotherapy: paclitaxel or pegylated liposomal doxorubicin + bevacizumab Chemotherapy: paclitaxel or pegylated liposomal doxorubicin + bevacizumab + atezolizumab (Humanized IgG1k) | Primary: | Randomized, partially blinded. |
| MK-7339-001/KEYLYNK-001/ENGOT-ov43 | Patients with newly diagnosed low-differentiated ovarian cancer, primary peritoneal cancer, and stage III or IV ovarian cancer after PDS or planned for IDS. | Chemotherapy: carboplatin and paclitaxel + pembrolysumab (Humanized IgG4), followed by maintenance olaparib and pembrolysumab (Humanized IgG4) Chemotherapy: carboplatin and paclitaxel + pembrolysumab (Humanized IgG4), followed by maintenance pembrolysumab (Humanized IgG4) Chemotherapy: carboplatin and paclitaxel | Primary: | Randomized, quadropoly blinded. |
PFS—progression-free survival, OS—overall survival, PFS2—second progression, HRQoL—health-related quality of life, pCR—pathological complete response, PK—the pharmacokinetics, ORR—objective response rate, DoR—duration of response, TFST—time to first subsequent therapy, TSST—time to second subsequent therapy, TDT—time to discontinuation or death, AEs—adverse events, DLT—dose limiting toxicities, PRO—patient reported outcomes, ADAs—anti-drug antibodies, QLQ—Quality of Life Questionnaire, QoL—quality of life.