| Literature DB >> 36176763 |
James J Ignatz-Hoover1,2, James J Driscoll1,2,3.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) remains an incurable, genetically heterogeneous disease characterized by the uncontrolled proliferation of transformed plasma cells nurtured within a permissive bone marrow (BM) microenvironment. Current therapies leverage the unique biology of MM cells and target the immune microenvironment that drives tumor growth and facilitates immune evasion. Proteasome inhibitors and immunomodulatory drugs were initially introduced to complement and have now supplanted cytotoxic chemotherapy as frontline anti-myeloma agents. Recently, monoclonal antibodies, bispecific antibodies, and chimeric antigen receptor T cells were developed to revamp the immune system to overcome immune suppression and improve patient responses. While current MM therapies have markedly extended patient survival, acquired drug resistance inevitably emerges and drives disease progression. The logical progression for the next generation of MM therapies would be to design and validate agents that prevent and/or overcome acquired resistance to immunotherapies. The complex BM microenvironment promotes resistance to both current anti-myeloma agents and emerging immunotherapies. Myeloma cells are intertwined with a complex BM immune microenvironment that contributes to the development of adaptive drug resistance. Here, we describe recently FDA-approved and investigational anti-myeloma agents that directly or indirectly target the BM microenvironment to prevent or overcome drug resistance. Synergistic effects of anti-myeloma agents may foster the development of rationally-designed drug cocktails that prevent BM-mediated resistance to immunotherapies.Entities:
Keywords: Multiple myeloma; adaptive resistance; bone marrow microenvironment; drug resistance; immunomodulators; immunotherapeutics; proteasome inhibitors
Year: 2022 PMID: 36176763 PMCID: PMC9511806 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2022.23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Effects of FDA-approved and investigational agents on the myeloma immune microenvironment
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| Bortezomib (Velcade) | FDA-approved | Proteasome 5 | Bortezomib inhibits osteoclast differentiation induced by the RANKL, stimulates osteoblast differentiation and inhibits autocrine/paracrine signaling in MSCs and in ECM. PIs also reduce MM adhesion to BMSCs[ |
| Carfilzomib (Kyprolis) | FDA-approved | Proteasome 5 | |
| Ixazomib (Ninlaro) | FDA-approved | Proteasome 5 | |
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| Thalidomide (Thalomid) | FDA-approved | CRBN | IMiDs promote anti-proliferative, T-cell co-stimulatory, anti-angiogenic and anti-inflammatory effects[ |
| Lenalidomide (Revlimid) | FDA-approved | CRBN | |
| Pomalidomide (Pomalyst) | FDA-approved | CRBN | |
| Cel-MODCC-92480 | Phase 1/2 | CRBN E3 Ub ligase | Antitumor and immunostimulatory activities |
| CC-220 (Iberdomide) | Phase 1b/2a | CRBN E3 Ub ligase | Antitumor and immunostimulatory activities |
| C-92480 (Mezigdomide) | Phase 1/2 | CRBN E3 Ub ligase | Antitumor and immunostimulatory activities |
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| Daratumumab (Darzalex) | FDA-approved | CD38 | Augments NK-cell cytotoxicity, induces robust increases in helper and cytotoxic T-cell absolute counts. Increases memory T cells while decreasing naïve T cells. Eliminates CD38+ immune suppressor cells, e.g., Tregs, Bregs, and MDSCs[ |
| Elotuzumab (Empliciti) | FDA-approved | SLAMF7 | Induces TAM activation and mediates ADCP through an FcγR-dependent manner |
| Isatuximab (Sarclisa) | FDA-approved | CD38 | Eliminates CD38+ immunosuppressive Tregs and alleviates BM-induced immunosuppression |
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| Selinexor (Xpovio) | FDA-approved | Exportin 1, (XPO) | Increased NK cell cytotoxicity in vitro, potentiates ADCC, downregulates pro-survival signals from BM microenvironment, blunts the protective effects from pro-survival signals from TNF, IL-6, IL-4, BAFF BMSCs[ |
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| Denosumab (Prolia) | FDA-approved | RANKL | Potent Inhibitor of osteoclast function[ |
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| Zoledronate (Zometa) | FDA-approved | Farnesyl diphosphate | Reduces osteoclast function, inhibits liberation of matrix-synthase (FDPS) bound cytokines, increases IFN-γ production by IL-2-primed NK cells, decrease tumor cell adhesion to bone, and activates T cells[ |
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| Idecabtagene vicleucel (ida-cel, Abecma, bb2121) | FDA-approved | TNFRSF17 (BCMA) | T cells are physically recruited and linked to tumor surface Ags to elicit an anti-tumor immune response and overcome BM microenvironment-mediated immunosuppression[ |
| Ciltacabtagene autoleucel | FDA-approved | Two llama-derived Abs that bind human BCMA | Reduce BCMA-cell expression and microenvironment-mediated immunosuppression |
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| Blinatumumab (Blincyto) | FDA-Approved (R/R ALL) | CD19-targeting engager (CD19xCD3) | BiTEs bind simultaneously to T cells and tumor Ags, recruits T cells to tumors and tumor T-cell microenvironment, leading to T cell activation, proliferation, and tumor cell death |
| Pilot Study (MM) | |||
| Talquetamab | Phase I/II (MM) | GPRC5D-targeting bi-specific T-cell engager (GPRC5D x CD3) | Actively kills GPRC5D+ MM cell lines and primary MM cells |
| AMG420 | Phase 1b (RRMM) | BCMA-targeting bi-specific T-cell engager (BCMA x CD3) | Short half-life with encouraging activity in RRMM. Three patients dosed with 400 µg/d had MRD-negative CRs, 2 more responders in the dose confirmation cohort, 3 patients at lower doses attained CRs. No major toxicities were observed up to 400 µg/d[ |
| Teclistamab | Phase 1 (MM) | BCMA-targeting | At the phase 2 dose, showed promising efficacy and durable responses, well tolerated[ |
Effect of FDA-approved and developmental agents on other cell types within the BM microenvironment. Listed are anti-myeloma agents, putative targets and effects within the myeloma microenvironment. FDA: Federal Drug Administration; IMiD: immunomodulatory drug; NF-κB: nuclear factor kappa-B; MSC: mesenchymal stem cell; ECM: extracellular matrix; BMSC: bone marrow stromal cell; CRBN: Cereblon (CUL4-CRBN E3 Ub ligase complex); Ub: ubiquitin; TAM: tumor-associated macrophage; RANKL: receptor activator of NF-κB ligand; RRMM: relapsed and/or refractory multiple myeloma; BiTE: bispecific T cell engager; SLAMF7: signaling lymphocytic activation molecule F7; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; IFN-γ: interferon-gamma; BAFF: B-cell activating factor; MDSCs: myeloid-derived suppressor cell; ADCP: antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity; ALL: acute lymphoblastic leukemia; Ags: antigens; BCMA: B-cell maturation antigen; GPRC5D: G protein-coupled receptor, class C group 5 member D.
Figure 1Direct and indirect effects of FDA-approved and developmental agents on MM cells and their interaction with other cell types within the tumor microenvironment. CAR: Chimeric antigen receptor.