| Literature DB >> 35740430 |
Christopher Hino1, Bryan Pham1, Daniel Park2, Chieh Yang3, Michael H K Nguyen4, Simmer Kaur4, Mark E Reeves4, Yi Xu4, Kevin Nishino1, Lu Pu1, Sue Min Kwon1, Jiang F Zhong5, Ke K Zhang6,7, Linglin Xie6,7, Esther G Chong4, Chien-Shing Chen4, Vinh Nguyen8, Dan Ran Castillo4, Huynh Cao4.
Abstract
The tumor microenvironment (TME) plays an essential role in the development, proliferation, and survival of leukemic blasts in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Within the bone marrow and peripheral blood, various phenotypically and functionally altered cells in the TME provide critical signals to suppress the anti-tumor immune response, allowing tumor cells to evade elimination. Thus, unraveling the complex interplay between AML and its microenvironment may have important clinical implications and are essential to directing the development of novel targeted therapies. This review summarizes recent advancements in our understanding of the AML TME and its ramifications on current immunotherapeutic strategies. We further review the role of natural products in modulating the TME to enhance response to immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: acute myeloid leukemia; immunotherapy; natural products; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740430 PMCID: PMC9219790 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10061410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Schematic illustration summarizing the AML tumor microenvironment and current immunotherapeutic strategies. AML blasts residing in the bone marrow evade elimination through interaction with the tumor microenvironment (TME). The TME is composed of a complex network or stromal cells (fibroblasts, mesenchymal, and endothelial cells), extracellular matrix, immune cells (NK cells, TAMS, T and B lymphocytes), and the soluble factor they secrete. Together the components of the TME orchestrate the survival and proliferation of tumor cells. Approaches to target the immunosuppressive microenvironment include the use of CAR T cell, ICI, BiTE, and TIL immunotherapy or the use of natural products, such as vitamin D, C, B6, and E. Abbreviations: AML, Acute myeloid leukemia; TIL, tumor infiltrating lymphocyte; MSC, mesenchymal stromal cell; TAM, tumor associated macrophage; MDSC, myeloid derived suppressor cell; Treg, regulatory T cell, BiTE, bispecific T cell engager; ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; NK, natural killer cell; IDO, indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase; ARG, arginase II; ROS, reactive oxygen species; IL, interleukin; PD-L1/PD, programmed cell death/ligand 1; TIM-3, T cell immunoglobulin domain and mucin domain 3; CTLA-4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4; TGF, transforming growth factor; NKG2D, natural killer group 2 member D; KIR, Killer IG-like receptor. Image created with Biorender.com (accessed on 17 May 2022).
Figure 2Schematic illustration of immune checkpoint inhibitor mechanism of action. Monoclonal antibodies, such as those targeting PD1/PDL-1, CTLA-4, and TIM3, block key immune checkpoint molecules typically expressed on AML blasts for the purpose of immune evasion. Image created with Biorender.com (accessed on 17 May 2022).
Published trials of immune checkpoint inhibitors.
| Author | Phase | Intervention | Patient Population | Disease State | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Davis et al. 2016 [ | I/IIb | Ipilimumab | AML, NHL, HL, CML, CLL, MM, MPN, AL | Relapsed after Allo-HSCT | CR: 23% (5/28) |
| Daver et al. 2016 [ | I/IIb | Nivolumab + Azacitidine | AML | Relapsed after prior therapy | CR: 18% (6/51) |
| Lindblad et al. 2018 | I/II | Pembrolizumab + decitabine | AML | Relapsed after prior therapy | CR: 10% (1/10) |
| Daver et al. 2018 [ | II | Nivolumab + Azacitidine + Ipilimumab | AML | R/R | CR/CRi: 36% (6/20) |
| Ravandi et al. 2019 [ | II | Idarubicin + Cytarabine + Nivolumab | AML and high risk MDS | Newly diagnosed | CR:/CRi 78% (34/44) Negative |
Prior clinical trials of antibody construct therapies.
| Target | Author | Drug (Antibody Construct) | Patient Population | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD33 | Ravandi et al. 2018/2020 [ | AMG330 (anti-CD3 × CD33 BiTE) | 55 patients with R/R-AML | Efficacy: 19% ORR (7% CR, 9% CR with incomplete hematologic recovery, 2% with morphological leukemia free state) |
| CD33 (HLE *) | Subklewe et al. 2019 [ | AMG673 (Half-Life Extended | 30 patients with R/R-AML | Efficacy: (12/27) 44% with bone marrow blast reduction, 6 of which had >50% reduction in blasts; 1 patient with complete remission with 85% reduction |
| CD123 | Uy et al. 2021 [ | Flotetuzumab (anti CD3 × CD123 | 92 R/R-AML patients | Primary induction failure or early relapse cohort (n = 30): Efficacy: 27% with CR/CRh; median OS 10.2 months among responders |
| CD123 | Ravandi et al. 2020 [ | Vibecotamab (XmAb14045; anti CD3 | 104 R/R-AML, 1 B-cell ALL, | Efficacy: 14% ORR (4% CR); 71% SD |
| CD123 | Watts et al. 2021 [ | APVO436 (anti CD3 × CD123 BiTE) | 22 R/R-AML and 6 R/R-MDS | Efficacy: 2 patients with blast |
* Half-Life Extended (HLE).
Summarizing the Current Trials and Targets of BiTEs, DARTs, BiKEs, and TriKEs.
| Target | Drug (Antibody Construct) | Patient Population | NCT | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD33 | AMV564 (CD3 × CD33 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML | NCT03144245 | 1 |
| AMG673 (CD3 × CD33 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML | NCT03224819 | 1 | |
| GEM333 (CD3 × CD33 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML | NCT03516760 | 1 | |
| JNJ-67571244 (CD3 × CD33 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML, MDS | NCT03915379 | 1 | |
| AMG330 (CD3 × CD33 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML, Minimal Residual Disease Positive AML, MDS | NCT02520427 | 1 | |
| AMV564 (CD3 × CD33 bispecific antibody) | MDS | NCT03516591 | 1 | |
| CD123 | JNJ-63709178 (CD3 × CD123 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML | NCT02715011 | 1 |
| APVO436 (CD3 × CD123 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML, MDS | NCT03647800 | 1 | |
| MGD006 (CD3 × CD123 DART) | R/R AML, MDS | NCT02152956 | 1 and 2 | |
| SAR440234 (CD3 × CD123 bispecific antibody) | R/R AML, MDS, B-ALL | NCT03594955 | 1 and 2 | |
| XmAb14045 (CD3 × CD123 bispecific antibody) | CD123 Expressing hematologic malignancies | NCT02730312 | 1 | |
| CD16/CD33 | GTB-3550 (CD16/IL-15/CD33 TriKE) | R/R AML, MDS, Advanced Systemic Mastocytosis | NCT03214666 | 1 and 2 |
| CD135 | AMG427 (CD3 × CD135(FLT3) bispecific antibody) | R/R AML | NCT03541369 | 1 |
| CLEC12A | MCLA-117 (CD3 × CLEC12A bispecific antibody) | R/R AML and newly diagnosed elderly AML | NCT03038230 | 1 |
Figure 3Schematic illustration of BiTE, BiKE, and TriKE structure and mechanism of action. Bispecific antibodies containing single-chain variable fragment (scFv) specific for CD3 on T cells (BiTE therapy) or CD16 on NK cells (BiKE therapy) and a specific tumor-associated antigen (TAA) are used to trigger T and NK cell activation and cytokine release. TriKE therapy similarly contains scFV specific for CD16a and TAA, but also a humanized anti-CD16 heavy chain camelid single-domain antibody (sdAb) that provides signals for NK priming, expansion, and survival. By inducing immunologic synapse formation and costimulatory signals, BiTE, BiKE, and Trike therapy can overcome immune exhaustion and improve anti-tumor activity in the setting of the AML TME. Image created with Biorender.com (accessed on 17 May 2022).
Ongoing clinical trials for CAR T cell therapy against AML.
| Target Antigen | Population | NCT ID | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD33 | R/R AML | NCT03126864 | I |
| R/R AML | NCT02799680 | I | |
| R/R AML | NCT01864902 | I/II | |
| R/R AML | NCT02944162 | I/II | |
| R/R AML, MDS; ALL | NCT03291444 | I | |
| R/R AML | NCT03473457 | ||
| AML | NCT03222674 | I/II | |
| CD123 | AML | NCT03585517 | I |
| Recurred AML after allo-HSCT | NCT03114670 | I | |
| R/R AML | NCT03556982 | I/II | |
| R/R AML | NCT02623582 | I | |
| R/R AML | NCT02159495 | I | |
| R/R AML | NCT03672851 | I | |
| R/R AML | NCT03766126 | I | |
| R/R AML, MDS; ALL | NCT03291444 | I | |
| R/R AML | NCT03473457 | n/a | |
| R/R AML | NCT03796390 | I | |
| AML | NCT03222674 | I/II | |
| CD38 | R/R AML, MDS; ALL | NCT03291444 | I |
| R/R AML | NCT03473457 | ||
| AML | NCT03222674 | I/II | |
| UCART23 | R/R AML | NCT03190278 | I |
| R/R AML, high-risk AML | NCT01864902 | I | |
| CD/123/CLL1 | R/R AML | NCT03631576 | II/III |
| CD33/CLL1 | R/R AML, MDS, MPN, CML | NCT03795779 | I |
| CCL1 | AML | NCT03222674 | I/II |
| NKG2D | AML, MDS-RAEB, MM | NCT02203825 | I |
| R/R AML, AML, Myeloma | NCT03018405 | I/II | |
| Lewis Y | Myeloma, AML, MDS | NCT01716364 | I |
| WT1 | R/R AML, ALL, MDS | NCT03291444 | I |
| CD7/NK92 | R/R AML | NCT03018405 | I/II |
Figure 4Mechanism of action of CAR T cell therapy. The T cell chimeric antigen receptor binds the target antigen on the tumor cell. This will subsequently allow T cells to mediate anti-tumor effects through the perforin and granzyme axis. Cytokines, such as IL-2, TNF-alpha, and IFN-gamma, promote T cell activation and proliferation.