| Literature DB >> 35086565 |
Jun Zhang1, Nirmal Veeramachaneni2.
Abstract
Inflammation is a process that protects organs against various potentially harmful stimuli and enables repair. Dysregulated inflammation, however, damages tissues and leads to disease, including cancer. Cancer-related inflammation is characterized by cytokine production, leukocyte infiltration, angiogenesis, and tissue remodeling-all critical processes in modulating the tumor microenvironment (TME). The TME is known to play a key role in tumor progression, and targeting its immune component to achieve a better anti-tumor response is the basis of immunotherapy. Despite the critical role cytokines play in the TME and tumor progression, there is currently only one therapy approved by the FDA that directly involves cytokine signaling: human recombinant interleukin-2 protein, aldesleukin. The recent Canakinumab Anti-inflammatory Thrombosis Outcomes Study (CANTOS) trial evaluated the use of anti-interleukin-1β therapy in atherosclerotic disease; however, it also revealed interleukin-1β (IL-1β) blockade with canakinumab led to a significantly lower incidence of lung cancer. This has opened a promising new avenue for lung cancer therapy, and strategies using anti-IL-1β therapy alone or in combination with chemotherapy and/or immune checkpoint blockade are currently being evaluated in several clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: Immunotherapy; Inflammation; Interleukin-1 beta; Lung cancer; Tumor microenvironment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35086565 PMCID: PMC8796434 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-021-00341-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Fig. 1Main components of the tumor microenvironment. The tumor microenvironment comprises cellular and non-cellular fractions. The cellular component consists of cancer cells, endothelial cells, pericytes, carcinoma-associated fibroblasts, and immune cells. The immune compartment comprises several populations, such as B-cells, T-cells and natural killer cells, tumor-associated macrophages, myeloid-derived suppressor cells, and dendritic cells. The extracellular matrix represents the non-cellular component of the tumor microenvironment and acts as a scaffold. Elements of the tumor microenvironment interact via the extracellular matrix, cell-cell contacts, and through the release of cytokines, chemokines, and extracellular vesicles, among others. (Modified from Cui and Guo. 2016 [9])
Ongoing clinical trials studying anti-IL-1 strategies (except IL-1β strategies for lung cancer, shown in Table 2), alone or in combination, for cancer treatment
| Therapy | Target | Tumor type | Recruitment status | Study type | Trial name | Start date | Estimated completion date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anakinra + chemotherapy | IL-1R | Pancreatic adeno-carcinoma | Active, not recruiting | Phase I | NCT02550327 [ | – | January 16 | August 2023 |
| Anakinra + denosumab + everolimus | IL-1R, RANKL, and mTOR | Advanced, metastatic, recurrent or refractory cancer | Active, not recruiting | Phase I | NCT01624766 [ | – | June 2012 | June 2020 |
| CAN04 + chemotherapy | IL-1RAP | NSCLC, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, TNBC, CRC | Recruiting | Phase I/II | NCT03267316 [ | CANFOUR | December 2017 | June 2021 |
| CAN04 + pembrolizumab | IL-1RAP, PD-1 | NSCLC, urothelial carcinoma, malignant melanoma, HNSCC | Recruiting | Phase I | NCT04452214 [ | – | September 2020 | January 2022 |
| Canakinumab | IL-1β | Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome | Recruiting | Phase II | NCT04239157 [ | – | August 2020 | December 2022 |
| Canakinumab + spartalizumab | IL-1β, PD-1 | Melanoma | Recruiting | Phase II | NCT03484923 [ | PLATforM | September 2018 | April 2022 |
| Canakinumab + spartalizumab + LAG525 | IL-1β, PD-1, LAG-3 | TNBC | Recruiting | Phase Ib | NCT03742349 [ | – | January 2019 | January 2022 |
| Canakinumab + spartalizumab + chemotherapy | IL-1β, PD-1 | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | Recruiting | Phase Ib | NCT04581343 [ | PanCAN-SR1 | October 2020 | March 2022 |
| Canakinumab + spartalizumab | IL-1β, PD-1 | RCC | Recruiting | Phase I | NCT04028245 [ | SPARC-1 | August 2019 | December 2021 |
| Gevokizumab + bevacizumab/ramucirumab/cabozantinib + chemotherapy | IL-1β, VEGF, VEGFR2 | CRC, gastroesophageal cancer, RCC | Recruiting | Phase I | NCT03798626 [ | – | May 2019 | Jul 2024 |
Abbreviations: CRC colorectal cancer, HNSCC head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, IL-1β interleukin-1β, IL-1R interleukin-1 receptor, IL-1RAP interleukin-1 receptor accessory protein, LAG-3 lymphocyte-activation gene 3, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, PD-1 programmed death-1, RANKL receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-Β ligand, RCC renal cell carcinoma, TNBC triple negative breast cancer, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGFR2 vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2
Ongoing clinical trials studying anti-IL-1β strategies, alone or in combination, for lung cancer treatment
| Therapy | Target | Tumor type | Recruitment status | Study type | Trial name | Start date | Estimated completion date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canakinumab + pembrolizumab + chemotherapy | IL-1β + PD-1 | NSCLC | Active, not recruiting | Phase III | NCT03631199 [ | CANOPY-1 | December 2018 | September 2022 |
| Canakinumab + chemotherapy | IL-1β | NSCLC | Active, not recruiting | Phase III | NCT03626545 [ | CANOPY-2 | January 2019 | March 2022 |
| Canakinumab +/− pembrolizumab | IL-1β +/− PD-1 | NSCLC | Recruiting | Phase II | NCT03968419 [ | CANOPY-N | November 2019 | January 2022 |
| Canakinumab | IL-1β | NSCLC | Recruiting | Phase III | NCT03447769 [ | CANOPY-A | March 2018 | January 2027 |
| Canakinumab +/− PDR001 | IL-1β +/− PD-1 | NSCLC, TNBC, CRC | Active, not recruiting | Phase Ib | NCT02900664 [ | – | August 2016 | March 2021 |
| Canakinumab + PDR001 + chemotherapy | IL-1β +/− PD-1 | NSCLC | Active, not recruiting | Phase Ib | NCT03064854 [ | ElevatION:NSCLC-101 | May 2017 | December 2021 |
Abbreviations: CRC colorectal cancer, IL-1β interleukin-1beta, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, PD-1 programmed death-1, PDR001 PD-1 inhibitor, aka spartalizumab, TNBC triple negative breast cancer
Fig. 2Role of IL-1β in the tumor microenvironment. Interleukin-1β (IL-1β) is a cytokine that plays diverse roles in the tumor microenvironment: it promotes tumor growth and invasiveness, induces angiogenesis, and creates an immunosuppressive environment. Tumor cell survival and proliferation may be promoted by high levels of circulating IL-1β due to chronic inflammation. Targeting IL-1β in the numerous pathways it is involved in within the tumor microenvironment results in an overall anti-tumor effect