| Literature DB >> 35078492 |
Mathilde Bausart1, Véronique Préat2, Alessio Malfanti1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) treatment has remained almost unchanged for more than 20 years. The current standard of care involves surgical resection (if possible) followed by concomitant radiotherapy and chemotherapy. In recent years, immunotherapy strategies have revolutionized the treatment of many cancers, increasing the hope for GBM therapy. However, mostly due to the high, multifactorial immunosuppression occurring in the microenvironment, the poor knowledge of the neuroimmune system and the presence of the blood-brain barrier, the efficacy of immunotherapy in GBM is still low. Recently, new strategies for GBM treatments have employed immunotherapy combinations and have provided encouraging results in both preclinical and clinical studies. The lessons learned from clinical trials highlight the importance of tackling different arms of immunity. In this review, we aim to summarize the preclinical evidence regarding combination immunotherapy in terms of immune and survival benefits for GBM management. The outcomes of recent studies assessing the combination of different classes of immunotherapeutic agents (e.g., immune checkpoint blockade and vaccines) will be discussed. Finally, future strategies to ameliorate the efficacy of immunotherapy and facilitate clinical translation will be provided to address the unmet medical needs of GBM.Entities:
Keywords: Brain cancer; Cancer vaccine; Combination immunotherapy; Glioblastoma; Immune checkpoint blockade
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35078492 PMCID: PMC8787896 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-022-02251-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Schematic representation of GBM TME. A GBM TME is composed of various cell types. B Factors impeding translation of GBM immunotherapy treatments: (i) the BBB limiting drug delivery efficacy, (ii) the relatively low infiltration of T cells as well as their high exhaustion marker expression, (iii) the high infiltration of immunosuppressive cells (such as Tregs, TAMs and MDSCs) in the TME and (iv) the infiltrative and heterogeneous characteristics of GBM cells. (Abbreviations: GBM = Glioblastoma; LAG-3 = Lymphocyte activation gene 3 protein; MDSC = Myeloid-derived suppressive cell; NK = Natural killer; PD-1 = Programmed cell death-1; TAM = Tumor-associated microglia and macrophage; TIM-3 = T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain containing-3)
Failures of phase III clinical trials of immunotherapy for GBM
| Trial | Treatment | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CheckMate 143 phase III (NCT02017717) | ↔ No improvement of mOS with anti-PD-1 (9.8 months) vs anti-VEGF (10 months) | Reardon et al., (2020) [ | |
| CheckMate 498 phase III (NCT02617589) | ↔ No improvement of mOS with anti-PD-1 + RT (13.4 months) vs control treatment (14.9 months) | BMS press release; ClinicalTrials.gov | |
| CheckMate 548 phase III (NCT02667587) | Data not yet released | BMS press release | |
| ACT IV phase III (NCT01480479) | ↔ No improvement of mOS with rindopepimut (20.1 months) vs control group (20.0 months) | Weller et al., (2017) [ | |
| NCT00045968 phase III | For unidentified reasons | Liau et al., (2018) [ |
Fig. 2The GBM immunity cycle and associated treatments. The immune response in GBM can be divided into six steps, starting with antigen release from GBM cells and ending with the killing of GBM cells. Potential treatments impacting the immune response steps are written in blue. Step 1 – Antigens are released from dying GBM cells. Step 2 – Tumor antigens are captured by APCs, processed and displayed on MHC-I and -II molecules for presentation to T cells. Step 3 – Effector T cells are primed and activated in response to tumor antigen presentation. Step 4 – Activated T cells traffic through the BBB and infiltrate the tumor site. Step 5 – The immunosuppressive TME must be overcome to allow activated T cells to recognize and bind to GBM cells. Step 6 – Activated T cells kill GBM cells after binding to GBM tumor antigen on MHC-I through the T cell receptor (TCR). The boxes * and ** represent the CTLA-4 and PD-1/PD-L1 pathways. * T cells are activated after the binding of TCR with antigens displayed on MHC and the simultaneous CD28:CD80/86 costimulatory signal. CTLA-4 mediates T cell inhibition by competitively binding to CD80/86. ** T cells are activated after recognizing GBM cells, secreting inflammatory cytokines and inducing GBM cell death. PD-1:PD-L1 binding induces T cell inhibition by reducing T cell proliferation and cytokine production. (Abbreviations: APC = Antigen-presenting cell; Chemo = Chemotherapy; CTLA-4 = Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4; CXCR4 = C-X-C chemokine receptor 4; GBM = Glioblastoma; GITR = Glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor-related protein; IDO = Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; LAG-3 = Lymphocyte activation gene 3 protein; MDSC = Myeloid-derived suppressive cell; MHC = Major histocompatibility complex; PD-1 = Programmed cell death-1; PD-L1 = Programmed death ligand-1; RT = Radiotherapy; TAM = Tumor-associated microglia and macrophage; TCR = T cell receptor; TIGIT = T cell immunoreceptor with Ig and ITIM domains; TIM-3 = T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain containing-3; VEGF = Vascular endothelial growth factor)
Combinations of immunotherapy and chemotherapy in preclinical GBM models
| Combination treatment | Protocol | Cell line and model | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
anti-PD-1 TMZ | • Tumor implantation: 2 × 105 cells • TMZ: 30 mg/kg, 5 consecutive days starting at d8, IP • anti-PD-1: 10 mg/kg 2x on d13 and d15, IV | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • Combined therapy showed better antitumor efficacy than monotherapies with 100% tumor regression • TMZ abrogated the favorable immunological effects of anti-PD-1 (increased TIL numbers, decreased Treg and exhausted T cell frequencies, increased immunological memory) | Park J., et al. (2018) [ |
anti-PD-1 TMZ (standard or metronomic dose) | • Tumor implantation: / • TMZ: - Standard dose (SD): 50 mg/kg for 5 consecutive days, IP - Metronomic dose (MD): 25 mg/kg for 10 consecutive days, IP • anti-PD-1: 10 mg/kg 4x every 5 days, IP | GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • SD TMZ increased exhaustion markers on T cells, while MD TMZ did not lead to T cell exhaustion • anti-PD-1 reversed the exhaustion induced by SD TMZ in peripheral T cells but not in TILs • The survival benefit of anti-PD-1 therapy was abrogated by SD TMZ but not by MD TMZ | Karachi A., et al. (2019) [ |
anti-PD-1 TMZ (low dose) | • Tumor implantation: 5 × 104 cells, right cerebral cortex • TMZ: 50 μg/kg, 5 consecutive days, IP • anti-PD-1: 200 μg 3x, IP | GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • Combined therapy synergistically inhibited GBM tumor growth with a higher median survival time, a reduced tumor volume and 40% long-term survivors • Combined therapy increased CD4 and CD8 T cell infiltration in tumor lesions | Dai B., et al. (2018) [ |
anti-PD-1 TMZ or carmustine (BCNU) (systemic or local administration) | • Tumor implantation: 1.3 × 105 cells, left striatum • Systemic chemotherapy (SC): - TMZ: 66 mg/kg, daily from d10 to d14, IP - BCNU: 5, 15 and 30 mg/kg, 3x/week for 2 weeks starting at d14, IP • Local chemotherapy (LC): - TMZ: implanted at d10 - BCNU: implanted at d14 Polymer impregnated with chemotherapy (wafer), allowing constant release in the TME for at least 2 weeks, placed directly on top of the tumor • anti-PD-1: 200 μg 3x, on d0, d12, and d14, IP | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • Combination of LC and anti-PD-1 induced a robust immune response and survival benefit, with higher numbers of TILs and IFN-γ-secreting CD8 T cells in the brain, a higher Teff/Treg ratio and a higher tumor-infiltrating DC % • LC preserved the memory response upon rechallenge; SC abrogated it • SC abrogated the immunological benefits of anti-PD-1, did not provide survival benefit and resulted in severe lymphodepletion and severe depletion of TILs • SC alone or in combination with anti-PD-1 delayed tumor progression, but tumors recurred | Mathios D., et al. (2016) [ |
TMZ (systemic) ICD-based DC vaccine | • Tumor implantation: 5 × 105 cells • ICD-based DC vaccine: 1 × 106 DCs, IP - On d2, d9 and d15 – vaccine alone - On d21, d28 and d35 – combination Production: cancer cells were incubated with hypericin followed by light irradiation, and then, Hyp-PDT-treated cells were mixed with DCs • TMZ: 40 mg/kg, 6x on d5, d7, d9, d12, d14, and d16 | GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • Combined therapy provided a strong survival benefit with improved median survival and 50% long-term survivors • The ICD-based vaccine partially overcame the immune-ablating effects of chemotherapy. TMZ decreased the levels of brain-infiltrating CD8 T cells, but the combination decreased the levels of Tregs in the brain | Garg AD., et al. (2016) [ |
TMZ (systemic or local) GL-GM (whole tumor cell vaccine) | • Tumor implantation: 5 × 103 cells, right frontal lobe • GL-GM: 2 × 106 irradiated (40 Gy) GL261-GMCSF cells, on d5, d19, and d33, IP • TMZ: - Systemic (SC): 50 mg/kg, at d7, d8 and d9, IP - Local (LC): 4.2 mg/kg/day, from d7 to d9, intratumoral | GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • Local administration of TMZ induced a higher survival rate than systemic administration, and the effect was T cell-dependent • SC but not LC TMZ depleted blood leukocytes • Combination of TMZ IC and GL-GM increased survival and induced immune benefits with increased CD4 and CD8 TILs • Immune memory was established in long-term survivors (SC TMZ + GL-GM) | Fritzell S., et al. (2013) [ |
TMZ (local) Whole cell vaccine | • Tumor implantation: 5 × 103 cells, right frontal lobe • Whole cell immunization: 2 × 106 irradiated (40 Gy) cells (GL261 or KR158) on d5, d19, and d33, SC • TMZ: 180 μg administered over 3 days, starting on d7, convection-enhanced delivery (CED), intratumoral | GL261 or KR158-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • CED-TMZ and the whole cell vaccine synergized in the GL261 model resulting in 93% long-term survivors • The whole cell vaccine cured some mice of the KR158 model, and CED-TMZ prolonged median survival; however, there was no synergy between chemotherapy and immunotherapy • CED-TMZ plus the vaccine significantly decreased tumor volume and increased the intratumoral influx of T cells in both models | Enriquez Pérez JE., et al. (2020) [ |
TMZ anti-CD47 anti-PD-1 | • Tumor implantation: 1 × 105 cells, caudate putamen • TMZ: - Concurrent: 80 mg/kg, at d11, d13 and d15, IP - Sequential: metronomic dose (20 mg/kg) at d7–9 + 80 mg/kg at d11, d13 and d15, IP • anti-CD47 (MIAP-140): 100 μg, at d11, d13 and d15, IP • anti-PD-1: 100 μg, on d16, d18 and d20, IP | GL261 or CT2-A orthotopic syngeneic | • Sequential TMZ treatment combined with anti-CD47 improved tumor growth inhibition and mice survival; monotherapies and concurrent treatment did not • Combination of sequential TMZ and anti-CD47 activated immune response in vivo, with significant increase of CD4 and CD8 T cell, IFN-γ-secreting cell and activated TAM numbers • Triple combination of TMZ, anti-CD47 and anti-PD-1 further improved the survival | von Roemeling CA., et al. (2020) [ |
Combinations of immunotherapies including ICB in preclinical GBM models
| Combination treatment | Protocol | Cell line and model | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
anti-PD-1 anti-LAG-3 | • Tumor implantation: 1.3 × 105 cells, striatum • anti-PD-1: 200 μg, IP - on d7, d10, d12, and d14 (early schedule) - on d10, d12, and d14 (late schedule) • anti-LAG-3: 200 μg, IP - on d7 and d10 (early schedule) - on d10 and d12 (late schedule) | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • Early treatment with anti-LAG-3 and/or anti-PD-1 significantly improved survival • Late treatment with anti-LAG-3 did not significantly improve survival, but the combination did • The global immunological profiles were not different between the different treatment arms • Immune memory was established in long-term survivors | Harris-Bookman S., et al. (2018) [ |
anti-PD-1 anti-TIGIT | • Tumor implantation: 1.3 × 105 cells, striatum • anti-PD-1: 200 μg, on d10, d12, and d14, IP • anti-TIGIT: 200 μg, IP, every other day for a total of 5 doses starting on d8, d10, d12 or d14 (4 ≠ schedules: A, B, C, D) | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • Combination therapy improved long-term survival following each schedule • Combination therapy increased immune cell tumor infiltration and cytokine production • Tumor-infiltrating DCs were reduced following anti-TIGIT and anti-PD-1 combination treatment • Immune memory was established in long-term survivors | Hung AL., et al. (2018) [ |
anti-CTLA-4 anti-PD-L1 1-MT | • Tumor implantation: 4 × 105 cells • anti-CTLA-4: 100 μg loading dose followed by 3 × 50 μg maintenance doses every 3 days, IP • anti-PD-L1: 500 μg loading dose followed by 3 × 200 μg maintenance doses every 3 days, IP • 1-MT: in the drinking water over 30 days, starting on d7 for early blockade or on d14 for late blockade | GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • Early blockade with the triple combination cured 100% of mice, reduced Treg infiltration and increased IFN-γ-secreting CD8 T cell infiltration • Late blockade prolonged survival (78% long-term survival rate) and reduced Treg infiltration but also reduced brain-infiltrating T cells | Wainwright DA., et al. (2014) [ |
anti-GITR agonist SRS | • Tumor implantation: 1.3 × 105 cells, striatum • SRS: 10 Gy radiation (1.9 Gy/min), d10, focal • anti-GITR: 10 mg/kg, 3x, on d10, d13, and d16, IP | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • Combination therapy improved survival • The combination increased the CD8 effector T cell/Treg ratio • Immune memory was established in long-term survivors | Patel MA., et al. (2016) [ |
anti-PD-1 anti-OX40 agonist GVAX (whole tumor cell vaccine) | • Tumor implantation: 7.5 × 104 cells, right striatum • anti-PD-1: 200 μg, on d3, d6, and d9, IP • anti-OX40: 250 μg, on d3, d6, and d9, IP • GVAX: 1 × 106 irradiated (35 Gy) GL261-GMCSF cells, on d3, d6, and d9, SC | GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • The anti-PD-1 + anti-OX40 dual combination improved survival and the CD8/Treg ratio • The anti-PD-1 + GVAX dual combination improved survival and the CD8/Treg ratio and increased brain-infiltrating CD8 T cells • The triple combination led to 100% long-term survival with an increase in IFN-γ- and IL-2-secreting splenocytes and the CD4/CD8 ratio • Immune memory is established in long-term survivors | Jahan N., et al. (2019) [ |
anti-PD-L1 Neoantigen peptide vaccine | • Tumor implantation: 5 × 104 cells • anti-PD-L1: on d7, d9, and d11, IP • Vaccine: 50 μg of each peptide + 100 μg polyIC adjuvant, on d3, d6, and d9, SC | CT2A orthotopic syngeneic | The combination therapy significantly improved mouse survival (60% long-term survivors) | Liu CJ., et al. (2020) [ |
anti-PD-1 anti-TIM3 SRS | • Tumor implantation: 1.3 × 105 cells, left striatum • SRS: 10 Gy radiation (1.9 Gy/min), d10, focal, using the Small Animal Radiation Research Platform (SARRP) • anti-PD-1: 200 μg, on d10, d12, and d14 • anti-TIM-3: 250 μg, on d7, d11, and d-15 | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • The anti-PD-1 and dual therapies improved survival and led to long-term survival • The triple combination led to 100% remission • The triple combination improved the immune profile of the TME and the cytokine profile of both CD4 and CD8 T cells (increased the CD8/Treg ratio, decreased the frequency of FoxP3+ Tregs, and increased the production of the inflammatory cytokines IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-17a) • Immune memory was established in long-term survivors | Kim JE., et al. (2017) [ |
anti-CTLA-4 anti-4-1BB agonist SRS | • Tumor implantation: 1.3 × 105 cells, left striatum • SRS: 10 Gy radiation (1.9 Gy/min), d10, focal, using the SARRP • anti-4-1BB: 200 μg 3x, on d11, d14, and d17, IP • anti-CTLA-4: 800 μg 3x, on d11, d17, and d23, IP | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • The SRS + anti-CTLA-4 dual therapy prolonged survival, but only the triple combination led to long-term survival • The triple therapy and double immunotherapy led to higher TILs (CD4 and CD8 T cells) • Immune memory was established in long-term survivors and was glioma-specific | Belcaid Z., et al. (2014) [ |
anti-PD-1 anti-CXCR4 | • Tumor implantation: 1.3 × 105 cells, left striatum • anti-PD-1: 200 μg, on d10, d12, and d14, IP • anti-CXCR4: 200 μg, on d10, d12, and d14, IP | GL261-Luc orthotopic syngeneic | • The combination improved survival • Combination therapy decreased populations of suppressive myeloid cells in the brain • Combination therapy decreased the CD4/CD8 and Treg/CD8 ratios in the brain to a higher extent than did the monotherapies • The combination and monotherapies increased the levels of circulating inflammatory antitumor cytokines • Immune memory was established in long-term survivors | Wu A., et al. (2019) [ |
anti-PD-1 Antiangiogenic therapy (anti-VEGF + anti-Ang-2) | • Tumor implantation: 1 × 105 cells, striatum • anti-PD-1: 10 mg/kg, 2x/week starting on d10 for a total of 8 doses, IP • Antiangiogenic therapy: 25 mg/kg (anti-VEGF) and 5.6 mg/kg (anti-Ang-2), 2x/week starting on d5 until symptom apparition, SC | GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • The triple therapy significantly improved survival compared to antiangiogenic therapy alone • The triple therapy increased CD8 TIL numbers and decreased MDSCs and Tregs in the brain The antiangiogenic therapy efficacy was improved by the addition of anti-PD-1 therapy | Di Tacchio M., et al. (2019) [ |
anti-PD-1 anti-CTLA-4 G47Δ-mIL12 (= Oncolytic herpes simplex virus expressing IL-12) | • Tumor implantation: 2 × 104 cells (005 GSCs) or 1 × 104 cells (CT-2A), striatum • anti-PD-1: 10 mg/kg, on d8, 11 and d14 (005 GSCs) or on d10, d13 and d16 (CT-2A), IP • anti-CTLA4: 5 mg/kg, on d8, d11 and d14 (005 GSCs) or on d10, d13 and d16 (CT-2A), IP • G47Δ-mIL12: 5 × 105 PFU, on d8 (005 GSCs) or on d10 (CT-2A), intratumoral | mouse 005 GSCs or CT-2A orthotopic syngeneic | • Individual ICB only minimally extended survival in 005 GBM; combination of G47Δ-mIL12 with individual ICB modestly improved efficacy • G47Δ-mIL12 decreased the % of 005 cells and Tregs and induced M1-like polarization in TAMs; these effects are further increased with the triple combination • Dual ICBs significantly increased CD8 T cells in the brain, triple combination increased CD8 T cells and decreased Tregs • Triple combination resulted in 89% or 50% long term survival (005 GSCs or CT-2A, respectively) Immune memory was established in long-term survivors | Saha D., et al. (2017) [ |
anti-PD-1 anti-CTLA-4 anti-IL-6 anti-CD40 agonist | • Tumor implantation: 3 × 105 genetically engineered mouse tumor cells or 2 × 105 GL261 cells • anti-PD-1: 200 μg on d9, d12, d15 and d18, IP • anti-CTLA-4: 200 μg on d9, d12, d15 and d18, IP • anti-IL-6: 200 μg on d9, d12, d15 and d18, IP • anti-CD40: 100 μg on d12, IP | RCAS-genetically engineered model or GL261 orthotopic syngeneic | • Dual targeting of IL-6 and CD40 sensitized GBM to ICBs; survival was significantly improved following triple combination • Dual targeting of IL-6 and CD40 reduced tumor growth, triple combination blocked it • All treatments induced a decrease in immunosuppressive TAM activity • All treatments, except anti-CD40 alone, decreased the expression of immunosuppressive cytokines (IL-10, TGFβ) • Only triple combination induced an increase in TILs and in IFN-γ-secreting CD8 T cells | Yang F. et al. (2021) [ |