Combining active immunotherapy with immune checkpoint blockade for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer.
نویسنده
چکیده
ombination immunotherapy is emerging as a promising approach for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer. This research highlight discusses the combination of a PSA-directed poxviral vaccine and a monoclonal antibody blocking an important immune checkpoint molecule to treat men with metastatic castrationresistant prostate cancer. The results demonstrate feasibility and safety, as well as intriguing clinical responses to this combination therapy. Although prostate cancer has not traditionally been considered a disease amenable to immune-directed therapy, this notion has recently been challenged with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of sipuleucel-T for the treatment of men with advanced prostate cancer. This approval came on the heels of a pivotal phase III trial investigating the autologous cellular immunotherapy product, sipuleucel-T, which showed an improvement in survival relative to placebo among men with asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. However, treatment with sipuleucel-T does not usually produce declines in prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels, nor does it commonly induce tumor regressions in metastatic lesions. Therefore, investigations are underway to attempt to further augment anti-tumor immune responses in prostate cancer patients by combining therapeutic vaccines with other immune-modulating agents. One strategy has focused on the use of drugs that inhibit immunological checkpoint molecules: proteins that are expressed on T lymphocytes that serve to attenuate overexuberant immune responses. One such approach involves the use of a monoclonal antibody blocking cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen4 (CTLA-4), a negative regulatory molecule expressed on the surface of T cells. To this end, ipilimumab has shown encouraging clinical activity in patients with advanced melanoma, where it has been associated with an improvement in overall survival, leading to its FDA approval in that disease. In a recent issue of Lancet Oncology, Madan and colleagues explored the combination of a therapeutic prostate cancer vaccine given in conjunction with a CTLA-4 blocking antibody in men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. The specific vaccine used in this phase I study was PSA-Tricom, a poxviral-based immunotherapy that contains transgenes expressing PSA, as well as three T-cell costimulatory proteins. This vaccine was recently shown to improve survival compared to placebo in an unplanned secondary analysis of a randomized phase II trial in men with advanced prostate cancer. In the present study, 30 patients with docetaxelrefractory or chemotherapy-naive metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer were treated with a fixed dose of the PSA-Tricom vaccine (administered subcutaneously at study entry, and at monthly intervals thereafter) in combination with escalating doses of ipilimumab (1, 3, 5 or 10 mg kg, given intravenously at monthly intervals). The top-line results were that this combination was feasible and tolerable, with an acceptable safety profile. Most adverse events were immune-related, and included vaccination site reactions, colitis, rash, aminotransferase elevations and endocrine effects (hypothyroidism, adrenal insufficiency and hypophysitis). Several clinical responses were seen, as measured by PSA declines after treatment initiation. Fifty percent of patients (15/30) experienced some reduction in PSA, while 20% (6/30) achieved PSA declines of 50% or more. In addition, median survival in the overall patient cohort was 34 months, which is somewhat longer than expected in this patient population. How do these safety and efficacy data compare with those when each agent is used alone? Previous studies have shown that PSA-Tricom is associated with very minimal toxicity, manifesting primarily as mild injection site reactions, low-grade fever, chills, fatigue and nausea. However, only about 1% of patients receiving PSA-Tricom achieved a o50% reduction in PSA. On the other hand, adverse events with ipilimumab are more common and often more serious than those associated with PSA-Tricom, and include immune-related toxicities such as rash, colitis, hepatitis, and endocrine-related dysfunction (grade 3–4 immune events occur in about 23% of treated patients). It should be remembered that because the physiologic role of CTLA-4 is to attenuate autoimmune phenomena, treatment with ipilimumab may induce a number of breakthrough autoimmune events. In contrast to PSA-Tricom and other therapeutic vaccines (where PSA responses are infrequent), single-agent ipilimumab is capable of inducing PSA reductions of 50% or more in about 15% of patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. In the combination study reported by Madan and colleagues, grade 3–4 immunerelated toxicities were observed in 27% of patients (8/30), which might suggest that this class of adverse events could be slightly intensified when ipilimumab is coadministered with PSA-Tricom. However, alternative explanations for the apparent marginal Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Baltimore, MD 21231, USA Correspondence: Dr ES Antonarakis ([email protected]) C Asian Journal of Andrology (2012) 14, 520–521 2012 AJA, SIMM & SJTU. All rights reserved 1008-682X/12 $32.00
منابع مشابه
Dendritic Cell Immunotherapy, the Next Step in Cancer Treatment
Cancer immunotherapy has gained a lot of interest over the past few years due to the success of immune checkpoint inhibitors in treating cancer (1, 2). Immune checkpoint inhibitors, such as monoclonal antibodies against cytotoxic T-lymphocyte–associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed death 1 (PD-1), have been shown to increase survival of patients with advanced cancers (1, 2). These in...
متن کاملDendritic Cell Immunotherapy, the Next Step in Cancer Treatment
Cancer immunotherapy has gained a lot of interest over the past few years due to the success of immune checkpoint inhibitors in treating cancer (1, 2). Immune checkpoint inhibitors, such as monoclonal antibodies against cytotoxic T-lymphocyte–associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed death 1 (PD-1), have been shown to increase survival of patients with advanced cancers (1, 2). These in...
متن کاملIs there a role for immune checkpoint blockade with ipilimumab in prostate cancer?
Treatment for advanced prostate cancer has and will continue to grow increasingly complex, owing to the introduction of multiple new therapeutic approaches with the potential to substantially improve outcomes for this disease. Agents that modulate the patient's immune system to fight prostate cancer - immunotherapeutics - are among the most exciting of these new approaches. The addition of anti...
متن کاملCombining Immunotherapy and Radiotherapy for Cancer Treatment: Current Challenges and Future Directions
Since the approval of anti-CTLA4 therapy (ipilimumab) for late-stage melanoma in 2011, the development of anticancer immunotherapy agents has thrived. The success of many immune-checkpoint inhibitors has drastically changed the landscape of cancer treatment. For some types of cancer, monotherapy for targeting immune checkpoint pathways has proven more effective than traditional therapies, and c...
متن کاملPoxvirus-based active immunotherapy synergizes with immune checkpoint inhibitors to cause tumor regression and extend survival in preclinical models of cancer
Combining poxvirus-based immunotherapies which “step on the gas” to activate tumor antigen-specific T cell immune responses with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) which “release the brakes” on the immune system is a promising direction for enhancing cancer immunotherapy. Evidence for the potential clinical benefit from combination immunotherapy was obtained in a Phase I dose escalation trial....
متن کاملWhole Tumor Cell Vaccine Adjuvants: Comparing IL-12 to IL-2 and IL-15
Cancer immunotherapy (passive or active) involves treatments which promote the ability of the immune system to fight tumor cells. Several types of immunotherapeutic agents, such as monoclonal antibodies, immune checkpoint inhibitors, non-specific immunomodulatory agents, and cancer vaccines are currently under intensive investigation in preclinical and clinical trials. Cancer vaccines induce pe...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید
ثبت ناماگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید
ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Asian journal of andrology
دوره 14 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2012