| Literature DB >> 36067994 |
Tae Jin Kim1, Young Hwa Lee2, Kyo Chul Koo3.
Abstract
In the clinical setting of renal cell carcinoma (RCC), immune reactions such as tumor-specific T cell responses can be spontaneous events or can be elicited by checkpoint inhibitors, cytokines, and other immunotherapy modalities. The results from immunotherapy have led to significant advances in treatment methods and patient outcomes. The approval of nivolumab primarily as a second-line monotherapy and the latest approval of novel combination therapies as first-line treatment have established the significance of immunotherapy in the treatment of RCC. In this perspective, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy represents a major advance in the developing field of immunotherapy. This treatment modality facilitates T cells to express specific CARs on the cell surface which are reinfused to the patient to treat the analogous tumor cells. After showing treatment potential in hematological malignancies, this new therapeutic approach has become a strong candidate as a therapeutic modality for solid neoplasms. Although CAR-T cell therapy has shown promise and clinical benefit compared to previous T-cell modulated immunotherapies, further studies are warranted to overcome unfavorable physiological settings and hindrances such as the lack of specific molecular targets, depletion of CAR-T cells, a hostile tumor microenvironment, and on/off-tumor toxicities. Several approaches are being considered and research is ongoing to overcome these problems. In this comprehensive review, we provide the rationale and preliminary results of CAR-T cell therapy in RCC and discuss emerging novel strategies and future directions. © The Korean Urological Association.Entities:
Keywords: Immunotherapy; Metastasis; Receptors, chimeric antigen; Renal cell carcinoma; T cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36067994 PMCID: PMC9448669 DOI: 10.4111/icu.20220103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Investig Clin Urol ISSN: 2466-0493
Fig. 1Molecular structure of different chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) generations. The first-generation CAR only contains immunoreceptor tyrosine based activation motifs (ITAM) in the intracellular domain. Second-generation CARs included the addition of one co-stimulatory molecule and third-generation CARs contain a second co-stimulatory molecule. The fourth generation of CARs was based on second-generation CAR with a constitutive cytokine inducer. These xlink:types of CAR-T cells are also known as T cell redirected for universal cytokine-mediated killings. scFv, single-chain fragment variable; IL, interleukin. Adapted from the article of Yu and Kim. Int J Mol Sci 2021;22:640 [7].
Fig. 2Schematic drawing of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell production. T cells harvested from the peripheral blood are isolated via leukapheresis followed by apheresis. The T cells are transduced by viral/non-viral vectors and genetically modified to express chimeric antigen receptors. Following ex vivo expansion and purification, CAR-T cells are reinfused into the patient after lymphodepletion. Adapted from the article of Yu and Kim. Int J Mol Sci 2021;22:640 [7].
Active clinical trials with CAR-T cell immunotherapy enrolling renal cell carcinoma patients
| Identifier or study title | Clinical phase | RCC setting | Type of CAR-T cell | Costimulatory domain | Primary endpoints | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Safety and efficacy of CCT301 CAR-T in adult subjects with recurrent or refractory stage IV RCC ( | I/II | Recurrent or refractory stage IV RCC | CCT301-59 CCT301-28 | ROR2 | Safety ORR | [ |
| CAR-T cell receptor immunotherapy targeting VEGFR2 for patients with metastatic cancer ( | I/II | Metastatic RCC | Anti-VEGFR2 CAR-T cell | VEGFR2 | Complete response and partial response | [ |
| Administering peripheral blood lymphocytes transduced with a CD70 binding chimeric antigen receptor to people with CD70 expressing cancers ( | I/II | RCC | Anti-hCD70 CAR-T cell | CD70 | Safety | [ |
| COBALT-RCC ( | I | Relapsed or refractory RCC | CTX130 | CD70 | Adverse events and ORR | [ |
| Autologous CAR-T/TCR-T cell immunotherapy for malignancies ( | I/II | RCC | CAR-T cell/TCR-T cell | c-MET | Safety and adverse events | [ |
| TRAVERSE ( | I | Metastatic RCC | Allogenic CAR-T cell | CD70 | Safety and efficacy | [ |
| The clinical study of CaIX-targeted CAR-T cells in the treatment of advanced renal cell carcinoma ( | I | Advanced RCC | CAR-T cell | CaIX | Safety and efficacy | [ |
| P-MUC1C-ALLO1 allogeneic CAR-T cells in the treatment of subjects with advanced or metastatic solid tumors ( | I | Advanced or metastatic RCC | Allogenic CAR-T cell | Mucin 1 cell surface-associated C-terminal | Maximum tolerated dose and recommended phase II dosage | [ |
CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; NCT, National Clinical Trial; ORR, objective response rate; COBALT-RCC, study of the safety and efficacy of allogenic CTX 130 in subjects with advanced, relapsed, or refractory clear cell renal cell carcinoma; CTX130, allogenic clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats-Cas9 engineered T cells; TCR, T-cell receptor; CaIX, carbonic anhydrase IX; P-MUC1C-ALLO1, allogeneic CAR-T cell therapy designed to target cancer cells expressing Mucin 1 cell surface-associated C-terminal antigen.