An Update on the Role of Immunotherapy and Vaccine Strategies for Primary Brain Tumors

被引:0
|
作者
Martha R. Neagu
David A. Reardon
机构
[1] Dana-Farber Cancer Institute,Pappas Center for Neuro
[2] Massachusetts General Hospital,Oncology
来源
关键词
GBM; Immunotherapy; Checkpoint blockade; Vaccines; Autologous T cells; CAR T cells; Rindopepimut; EGFRvIII;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Existing therapies for glioblastoma (GBM), the most common malignant primary brain tumor in adults, have fallen short of improving the dismal patient outcomes, with an average 14–16-month median overall survival. The biological complexity and adaptability of GBM, redundancy of dysregulated signaling pathways, and poor penetration of therapies through the blood–brain barrier contribute to poor therapeutic progress. The current standard of care for newly diagnosed GBM consists of maximal safe resection, followed by fractionated radiotherapy combined with concurrent temozolomide (TMZ) and 6–12 cycles of adjuvant TMZ. At progression, bevacizumab with or without additional chemotherapy is an option for salvage therapy. The recent FDA approval of sipuleucel-T for prostate cancer and ipilumimab, nivolumab, and pembrolizumab for select solid tumors and the ongoing trials showing clinical efficacy and response durability herald a new era of cancer treatment with the potential to change standard-of-care treatment across multiple cancers. The evaluation of various immunotherapeutics is advancing for GBM, putting into question the dogma of the CNS as an immuno-privileged site. While the field is yet young, both active immunotherapy involving vaccine strategies and cellular therapy as well as reversal of GBM-induced global immune-suppression through immune checkpoint blockade are showing promising results and revealing essential immunological insights regarding kinetics of the immune response, immune evasion, and correlative biomarkers. The future holds exciting promise in establishing new treatment options for GBM that harness the patients’ own immune system by activating it with immune checkpoint inhibitors, providing specificity using vaccine therapy, and allowing for modulation and enhancement by combinatorial approaches.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] An Update on the Role of Immunotherapy and Vaccine Strategies for Primary Brain Tumors
    Neagu, Martha R.
    Reardon, David A.
    CURRENT TREATMENT OPTIONS IN ONCOLOGY, 2015, 16 (11)
  • [2] Immunotherapy for brain metastases and primary brain tumors
    Giacomo, Anna M. Di
    Mair, Maximilian J.
    Ceccarelli, Michele
    Anichini, Andrea
    Ibrahim, Ramy
    Weller, Michael
    Lahn, Michael
    Eggermont, Alexander M. M.
    Fox, Bernard
    Maio, Michele
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2023, 179 : 113 - 120
  • [3] Immunotherapy for malignant primary brain tumors with ICT-107, a dendritic cell vaccine
    Hdeib, Alia
    Sloan, Andrew
    EXPERT OPINION ON ORPHAN DRUGS, 2017, 5 (01): : 85 - 89
  • [4] Immunotherapy of Primary Brain Tumors: Facts and Hopes
    Buerki, Robin A.
    Chheda, Zinal S.
    Okada, Hideho
    CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2018, 24 (21) : 5198 - 5205
  • [5] THE CELLULAR IMMUNOTHERAPY OF PRIMARY BRAIN-TUMORS
    HAYES, RL
    REVUE NEUROLOGIQUE, 1992, 148 (6-7) : 454 - 466
  • [6] Primary brain tumors: Treatment strategies
    Rosenfeld, M
    REVISTA ECUATORIANA DE NEUROLOGIA, 1997, 6 (03): : 56 - 61
  • [7] Local Immunotherapy for Malignancy: A Role for Brain Tumors?
    Kwan, Kevin
    Falting, Lukas
    Schneider, Julia R.
    Boockvar, John A.
    NEUROSURGERY, 2018, 83 (01) : E5 - E5
  • [8] Immunotherapy for Primary Brain Tumors: No Longer a Matter of Privilege
    Fecci, Peter E.
    Heimberger, Amy B.
    Sampson, John H.
    CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2014, 20 (22) : 5620 - 5629
  • [9] Immunotherapeutic Treatment Strategies for Primary Brain Tumors
    Sunit Das
    Jeffrey J. Raizer
    Kenji Muro
    Current Treatment Options in Oncology, 2008, 9 : 32 - 40
  • [10] Immunotherapeutic Treatment Strategies for Primary Brain Tumors
    Das, Sunit
    Raizer, Jerey J.
    Muro, Kenji
    CURRENT TREATMENT OPTIONS IN ONCOLOGY, 2008, 9 (01) : 32 - 40