| Literature DB >> 35515125 |
Daniele Frisone1, Alex Friedlaender1,2, Alfredo Addeo1,3, Petros Tsantoulis1,3.
Abstract
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality worldwide. Immunotherapy has demonstrated clinically significant benefit for non-small-cell lung cancer, but innate (primary) or acquired resistance remains a challenge. Criteria for a uniform clinical definition of acquired resistance have been recently proposed in order to harmonize the design of future clinical trials. Several mechanisms of resistance are now well-described, including the lack of tumor antigens, defective antigen presentation, modulation of critical cellular pathways, epigenetic changes, and changes in the tumor microenvironment. Host-related factors, such as the microbiome and the state of immunity, have also been examined. New compounds and treatment strategies are being developed to target these mechanisms with the goal of maximizing the benefit derived from immunotherapy. Here we review the definitions of resistance to immunotherapy, examine its underlying mechanisms and potential corresponding treatment strategies. We focus on recently published clinical trials and trials that are expected to deliver results soon. Finally, we gather insights from recent preclinical discoveries that may translate to clinical application in the future.Entities:
Keywords: NSCLC; checkpoint inhibitor; immunotherapy; lung cancer; resistance
Year: 2022 PMID: 35515125 PMCID: PMC9066487 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.817548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1Mechanisms of resistance to immunotherapy and main molecular pathways involved.
Results of clinical trial for new agents targeting co-inhibitory signals on T cells and epigenetic alterations.
| Trial name/code | Setting | Phase | Molecule | N° of NSCLC patients | ORR (CR) | DCR | Median PFS | Median OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ENCORE 601 | Pretreated with ICIs | I | Entinostat (histone deacetylase inhibitor)+ pembrolizumab | 71 | 9,2% | – | 2,8 mo | 11,2 mo |
| NCT02608268 | Pretreated with ICIs | II | MBG-453 (anti-TIM3) + spartalizumab | 17 | 0/17 | 7/17 (41,2%) | – | – |
| CITYSCAPE (NCT03563716) | First line PD-L1+ | II random | Tiragolumab (anti-TIGIT) + atezo vs Placebo + atezolizumab | 135 | 37,3% vs 20,6% | – | 5,6 mo vs 3,9 mo | – |
| CTRI/2017/12/011026 | Pretreated, ICIs naïve | II | CA-170 (dual VISTA and PD-L1 oral inhibitor) 400 mg | 8 non squamous | 0/8 | 6/8 (75%) | 19,5 weeks | – |
| NCT03665285 | Pretreated with ICIs | I | NC318 (anti Siglec-15) | 13 | 2/10 (1) | 6/10 (60%) | – | – |
| NCT03667716 | Pretreated with ICIs | I | COM701 (PVRIG inhibitor) +/- Nivolumab | ? | 0 | 6/20 (3 NSCLC) | – | – |
Results of clinical trials for new agents targeting co-stimulatory molecules on T cells and cellular therapy.
| Trial name/code | Setting | Phase | Molecule | N° of NSCLC patients | ORR (CR) | DCR | Median PFS | Median OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02315066 | Pretreated with ICIs | I | PF-8600 (OX40 agonist) + utomilumab (CD137 agonist) | 20 | 5% | 40% | – | – |
| QUILT 3.055 (NCT03228667) | Pretreated with ICIs | II | N803 (IL-15 superagonist + ICI) | 81 | 8% | 59% | 3,9 mo | 13,8 mo |
| NCT03215810 | Pretreated with ICIs | I | TILs | 13 | 46% | 92% | – | – |
| NCT03987867 | First line | I | CIK cells + chemotherapy + Sintilimab (anti-PD-1) | 32 | 81,3% | 100% | 6 mo-PFS 84,4% | – |
| Atalante | Pretreated with ICI and platinum chemo | III random | OSE2101 (anticancer vaccine) vs docetaxel/pemetrexed | 118 pts PoI | 8% vs 18% | 6-mo DCR 26% vs 25% | 2,7 vs 3,4 mo | 11,1 vs 7,5 mo p=0,02 |
Results of clinical trial for new agents targeting Tumor Microenvironment (TME).
| Trial name/code | Setting | Phase | Molecule | N° of NSCLC patients | ORR (CR) | DCR | Median PFS | Median OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02501096 | Pretreated (52% with ICIs) | II | Pembrolizumab + Lenvatinib | 21 | 33% | 82% | 5,9 mo | – |
| MRTX-500 (NCT02954991) | Pretreated with ICI (having had clinical benefit) | II | Nivolumab + sitravatinib (anti-VEGF et anti-TAM) | 68 non squamous | 16% | – | 6 mo | 15 mo |
| NCT03666143 | Pretreated (63% with ICI) | II | Tislelizumab (anti-PD-1) + sitravatinib | 75 | 17% | 85% | 5,5 mo | – |
| NCT03083041 | First line | II | Apatinib + camrelizumab | 25 non squamous | 40%PD-L1+40%PD-L1- | 92% | 11 mo PD-L1 + | NR |
| NCT03583086 | Pretreated, ICI primary resistant | II | Vorolanib + nivolumab | 15 | 7% | 57% | – | – |
| NCT04646330 | First line PD-L1+ | I | AK104 (bispecific Ab vs PD-1 and CTLA-4) + anlotinib | 8 | 62,5% | 100% | – | – |
| NCT02517398 | Pretreated, ICIs naive | I | Bintrafusp alfa (fusion protein anti PD-L+ & TGFβR) | 80 | 21,3% | 40% | – | – |
| NCT03774979 | First line PD-L1+ | I | SHR-1701 fusion protein anti PD-L1 & TGFβR | 52 | 44,2% | 73,1 | – | – |