| Literature DB >> 35299737 |
Paola Allavena1, Cristina Belgiovine1, Elisabeth Digifico1, Roberta Frapolli2, Maurizio D'Incalci1,3.
Abstract
Immune cells in the tumor micro-environment (TME) establish a complex relationship with cancer cells and may strongly influence disease progression and response to therapy. It is well established that myeloid cells infiltrating tumor tissues favor cancer progression. Tumor-Associated Macrophages (TAMs) are abundantly present at the TME and actively promote cancer cell proliferation and distant spreading, as well as contribute to an immune-suppressive milieu. Active research of the last decade has provided novel therapeutic approaches aimed at depleting TAMs and/or at reprogramming their functional activities. We reported some years ago that the registered anti-tumor agent trabectedin and its analogue lurbinectedin have numerous mechanisms of action that also involve direct effects on immune cells, opening up new interesting points of view. Trabectedin and lurbinectedin share the unique feature of being able to simultaneously kill cancer cells and to affect several features of the TME, most notably by inducing the rapid and selective apoptosis of monocytes and macrophages, and by inhibiting the transcription of several inflammatory mediators. Furthermore, depletion of TAMs alleviates the immunosuppressive milieu and rescues T cell functional activities, thus enhancing the anti-tumor response to immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors. In view of the growing interest in tumor-infiltrating immune cells, the availability of antineoplastic compounds showing immunomodulatory effects on innate and adaptive immunity deserves particular attention in the oncology field.Entities:
Keywords: immunity; lurbinectedin; trabectedin; tumor micro-environment; tumor-associated macrophages
Year: 2022 PMID: 35299737 PMCID: PMC8921639 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.851790
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Selectivity of trabectedin for mononuclear phagocytes. TRAIL-R1 and R2 receptors are highly expressed in monocytes but not in T lymphocytes and neutrophils (PMNs) which indeed mainly express the non-signalling decoy receptor (TRAIL-R3). Thus, only monocytes are susceptible to trabectedin, which activates TRAIL-R1 and R2 and triggers a caspase 8-dependent apoptosis. This figure was made with Servier Medical Art templates, which are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0. Unported License (https://smart.servier.com).
Figure 2Mechanisms of action of trabectedin and lurbinectedin on the TME. Trabectedin and lurbinectedin share complex mechanisms of action on immune cells of the TME. They induce a selective apoptosis of TAMs, decrease monocyte migration and specific inflammatory mediators (CCL2, IL6, CXCL8). Moreover, trabectedin and lurbinectedin decrease angiogenesis and immunosuppression; they increase T cell infiltration and their expression of IFNγ and PD1, therefore improving the response to immunotherapy. This figure was made with Servier Medical Art templates, which are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0. Unported License (https://smart.servier.com).
Ongoing clinical studies using trabectedin or lurbinectedin in association with checkpoint blockade immunotherapy.
| ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier | Clinical study | Combination therapy | Tumor type Published results |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03886311 | Phase 2 | trabectedin | Advanced sarcoma |
| NCT03138161 | Phase 1 | trabectedin | Solid tumors |
| NCT03085225 | Phase 1b | trabectedin | Advanced soft-tissue sarcoma |
| NCT04253145 | Phase 1/2 | lurbinectedin | Small cell lung cancer |
| NCT04610658 | Phase 1/2 | lurbinectedin | Small cell lung cancer |
*Talimogene laherparepvec is an oncolytic herpes virus.