| Literature DB >> 36230621 |
Bryan Oronsky1, Brian Gastman2, Anthony P Conley3, Christopher Reid1, Scott Caroen1, Tony Reid1.
Abstract
Oncolytic viruses, colloquially referred to as "living drugs", amplify themselves and the therapeutic transgenes that they carry to stimulate an immune response both locally and systemically. Remarkable exceptions aside, such as the recent 14-patient trial with the PD-1 inhibitor, dostarlimab, in mismatch repair (MMR) deficient rectal cancer, where the complete response rate was 100%, checkpoint inhibitors are not cure-alls, which suggests the need for a combination partner like oncolytic viruses to prime and augment their activity. This review focuses on adenoviruses, the most clinically investigated of all the oncolytic viruses. It covers specific design features of clinical adenoviral candidates and highlights their potential both alone and in combination with checkpoint inhibitors in clinical trials to turn immunologically "cold" and unresponsive tumors into "hotter" and more responsive ones through a domino effect. Finally, a "mix-and-match" combination of therapies based on the paradigm of the cancer-immunity cycle is proposed to augment the immune responses of oncolytic adenoviruses.Entities:
Keywords: cancer immunity cycle; checkpoint inhibitors; immunosuppression; oncolytic adenoviruses; priming
Year: 2022 PMID: 36230621 PMCID: PMC9562194 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14194701
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Simplified schematic of the human adenovirus genome. The adenoviral genome is linear and double-stranded and about 30–38 kb in length. Adenovirus genes are broadly organized into early and late transcription units based on their expression before or after DNA replication. The early transcription units include the early region, E1A, E1B, E2, E3, and E4, and late L1–L5. At each end of the genome are inverted terminal repeats (ITRs), which act as a primer for the host DNA polymerase.
Examples of key design features and status of oncolytic adenoviral clinical candidates *.
| Virus/ | Company | Backbone | Tumor targeting | Promoter | Insertion Site/ | Clinical Stage/ | Combination with ICIs? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OAVs with clinical data | |||||||
| AdAPT-001/ | EpicentRx | Ad5 | 50 bp deletion E1A | Native E1A | E1B19K/ | Phase I/II/ | Yes |
| CG0070/ | CG Oncology | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | Exogenous E2F-1 | E3/GM-CSF | Phase II/ | Yes |
| Enadenotucirev/ | Psioxus | Ad3 | Ad 11 capsid | Native E1A | - | Phase I/ | Yes |
| NG-350A/ | Psioxus | Ad3 | Ad 11 capsid | Native E1A | E3-19K/ | Phase I/ | Yes |
| NG-641/ | Psioxus | Ad3 | Ad 11 capsid | Native E1A | E3-19K/ | Phase I/ | Yes |
| ONCOS-102/ | Targovax | Ad5 | Ad 3 capsid | Native E1A | E1B19K/ | Phase I and Phase II/ | Yes |
| LoAd-703/ | Lokon Pharma | Ad5 | Ad 35 capsid | CMV | E3/ | Phase I and Phase II/ | Yes |
| VCN-01 | Synthetic Biologics | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | Not available | E3/hyalronidase | NCT02045589 | No |
| OBP-301/ | Oncolys BioPharma | Ad5 | hTERT promoter | Exogenous hTERT | - | Phase I and Phase II/ | Yes |
| DNX-2401/ | DNAtrix | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | Unknown; not available | - | Phase I and Phase II/ | Yes |
| CELYVIR | Hospital Infantil Universitario Niño Jesús | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | E2F-1 | - | Phase I/ | No |
| Ad5-yCD/mutTKSR39rep-hIL12/ | Henry Ford Health System | Ad5 | E1B-55K-deleted | Native | Mutant herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-tk), | Phase I/ | No |
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| TILT-123/ | TILT Biotherapeutics | Ad5 | Ad3 fiber knob | Endogenous | E3/ | Phase I/ | Yes |
| DNX-2440/ | DNAtrix | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | Unknown | OX40 | Phase I/ | No |
| CAdVEC/ | Tessa Therapeutics | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | Unknown | - | Phase I/ | No; CAR-T cells |
| ORCA-10/ | Orca Therapeutics | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | Unknown | E3/19K-T1 protein | Phase I/II/ | No |
| SynOV1.1/ | Beijing Syngentech Co. | Ad5 | 24 bp deletion E1A | AFP | GMCSF | Phase I/II/ | Yes |
* Note that these are only examples chosen to highlight certain design features and so this table of OAVs is not all-encompassing. Abbreviations: Ad: adenovirus; bp: base pairs; IRES: internal ribosome entry site; TGF-beta: transforming growth factor beta; TNF-alpha: tumor necrosis factor-alpha; RGD: arginine–glycine–aspartic acid; AFP: alpha fetoprotein; HER2: human epidermal growth factor receptor 2; IL: interleukin; yCD: yeast cytosine deaminase; TK: thymidine kinase; MSC: mesenchymal stem cells; CMV: cytomegalovirus; GMCSF: granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; CAR-T: chimeric antigen receptor-T; hTERT: human telomerase reverse transcriptase.
Figure 2Modified cancer immunity cycle with the addition of immunosuppression.
Figure 3Therapeutic options based on cancer-immunity cycle.