| Literature DB >> 35027068 |
Ali Zarezadeh Mehrabadi1, Fatemeh Roozbahani2, Reza Ranjbar3, Mahdieh Farzanehpour4, Alireza Shahriary5, Ruhollah Dorostkar4, Hadi Esmaeili Gouvarchin Ghaleh6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer is one of the critical issues of the global health system with a high mortality rate even with the available therapies, so using novel therapeutic approaches to reduce the mortality rate and increase the quality of life is sensed more than ever. MAIN BODY: CAR-T cell therapy and oncolytic viruses are innovative cancer therapeutic approaches with fewer complications than common treatments such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy and significantly improve the quality of life. Oncolytic viruses can selectively proliferate in the cancer cells and destroy them. The specificity of oncolytic viruses potentially maintains the normal cells and tissues intact. T-cells are genetically manipulated and armed against the specific antigens of the tumor cells in CAR-T cell therapy. Eventually, they are returned to the body and act against the tumor cells. Nowadays, virology and oncology researchers intend to improve the efficacy of immunotherapy by utilizing CAR-T cells in combination with oncolytic viruses.Entities:
Keywords: Cancers; Chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR T cells); Combined approaches; Oncolytic viruses
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35027068 PMCID: PMC8756705 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-021-02486-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
A summary of the oncolytic viruses and their characteristics
| 1. ONYX‐015 in head and neck cancer | 32 kb | Endocytosis | Low | • Can be controlled geneticall • Clinical trial encounter • Great information of viral protein work • Low pathogenicity | • Replication cannot be easily shut-off | |
| 2.DNX‐2401 (delta‐24‐RGD) in ovarian cancer | ||||||
| 3. CG0070 in nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer | ||||||
| 1. T‐VEC (talimogene laherparepvec) in melanoma | 152 kb | Endocytosis; penetration | Low | • Can be easily manipulated genetically • Clinical trial experience; drugs exist to shut-off unwanted viral replication | • Side impacts incorporate genuine or possibly lethal disease • Unknown activity of numerous HSV1 qualities | |
| 2. HF10 in pancreatic cancer | ||||||
| Pexa-Vec(JX-594) in primary hepatocellular carcinoma | 130–375 kb | Membranepenetration and fusion | High | • Can be easily manipulated genetically • Clinical trial experience • Stable in human serum • Excellent human safety • Large capacity for encoding transgenes (50 kb) • Anti-tumor vascular activity | • Undesired viral replication cannot be easily shut-off | |
• Unknown action of many genes • Side effects might include potentially fatal or seriously morbid disease | ||||||
| PVS‐RIPO in recurrent glioblastoma | 7.5 kb | Receptor-mediated endocytosis | Moderate | • Good knowledge of viral gene functions | • Cannot be easily manipulated genetically • No clinical trial experience • Viral replication cannot be easily shut-off • Associated with fatality or serious disease | |
| MV‐NIS in ovarian cancer | 16 kb ~ | Membrane fusion | Low | • Extensively studied • Easily manipulated • Genomic stability • No integration into host genome • Adjustable gene • Crossing of physiological membranes | • Preexisting immune response due to vaccination | |
| RT3D (Reolysin®) in head and neck cancer | 22–27 kb | Endocytosis | Low | • Associated with relatively mild diseases • Good knowledge of viral gene function • Growth advantage in human cells | • Cannot be easily manipulated genetically • No clinical trial experience • Viral replication cannot be easily shut-off |
Fig. 1The anti-tumor impacts of CAR-T cells in combination with engineered-OVs.
Fig. 2Different levels of combined therapy of OVs with CAR-T cells. Oncolytic viruses exert their effects on cancer cells in a variety of ways. These viruses can lysis cancer cells to better activate APC cells, cause inflammation, and release inflammatory cytokines