Evolving CAR-T-Cell Therapy for Cancer Treatment: From Scientific Discovery to Cures
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Biology of CAR-T Cells in Cancer
3. Generation of CAR-T Cells
4. CAR-T-Cell Therapy: From Scientific Discovery to Cures
5. Current Limitations and Potential Strategies
6. Emerging Combination Strategies with CAR-T-Cell Therapy
6.1. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Chemotherapy
6.2. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Radiotherapy
6.3. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Oncolytic Virus
6.4. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Cancer Vaccines
6.4.1. Cellular Vaccines
6.4.2. Molecular Vaccines
6.4.3. Viral Vaccines
6.5. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Cytokines
6.6. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Checkpoint Inhibition
6.6.1. Antibodies-Mediated Checkpoint Blockade
6.6.2. DNR and shRNA-Mediated Checkpoint Blockade
6.6.3. Checkpoint Blockade via Gene Editing
Single-Gene Editing
Multiplex Gene Editing
Co-Stimulatory Molecule
Pharmacological Antagonists
6.7. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with BiTEs
6.8. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Immunomodulatory Agents
6.8.1. Lenalidomide
6.8.2. miRNAs (miR-153)
6.8.3. Decitabine
6.8.4. HDAC Inhibitors (HDACis)
6.8.5. SMAC Mimetics
6.9. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Allo-HSCT
6.10. Combination of CAR-T-Cell Therapy with Metabolic Inhibitors
7. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CAR | Chimeric antigen receptor |
TME | Tumor microenvironment |
ACT | Adoptive T-cell transfer |
MHC | Major histocompatibility complex |
TAA | Tumor-associated antigen |
FasL | Fas ligand |
TRAIL | Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand |
FDA | The Food and Drug Administration |
EMA | The European Medicines Agency |
EGFR | Epidermal growth factor receptor |
HER2 | Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 |
HNSCC | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma |
CEA | Carcinoembryonic antigen |
PSMA | Prostate-specific membrane antigen |
scFv | Single-chain variable fragment |
CD | Cluster of differentiation |
NSCLC | Non-small-cell lung cancers |
OS | Overall survival |
PD-1 | Programmed cell death-1 |
PFS | Progression-free survival |
CSD | Co-stimulatory domain |
IL | Interleukin |
CRISPR | Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats |
TCR | T-cell receptor |
CLL | Chronic lymphocytic leukemia |
ALL | Acute lymphoblastic leukemia |
DLBCL | Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma |
TNBC | Triple-negative breast cancer |
TLR4 | Toll-like receptor 4 |
DCs | Dendritic cells |
DAMPs | Damage-associated molecular patterns |
HMGB1 | High-mobility group box 1 |
IFN-I | Type I interferon |
Tregs | Regulatory T cells |
MDSC | Myeloid-derived suppressor cells |
TGF-β | Transforming growth factor-Β |
EOC | Epithelial ovarian cancer |
CTX | Cyclophosphamide |
M6P | Mannose-6-phosphate |
HLA | Human leukocyte antigen |
APCs | Antigen-presenting cells |
BCMA | B-Cell maturation antigen |
CPIs | Checkpoint inhibitors |
DNR | PD-1 dominant negative receptor |
shRNA | Short hairpin RNA |
A2ARs | Adenosine 2A receptors |
CTLA-4 | Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte associated protein 4 |
PDCD1 | Programmed cell death protein 1 |
TRAC | T-Cell receptor alpha constant |
BiTEs | Bispecific T-Cell engager |
HDAC | Histone deacetylase |
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NCT Number | CAR-T Strategy | Conditions | Type of Tumor | Phase | Current Status | Enrollment | Estimated/Actual Completion Date (DD Month YYYY) | Sponsor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NCT02348216 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMBCL), transformation follicular lymphoma (TFL), high-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBCL) | Hematological malignancy | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Completed | 307 | 27 July 2023 | Kite, A Gilead Company, Santa Monica, CA, USA |
NCT02445248 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Relapsed or refractory DLBCL | Phase 2 | Completed | 115 | 22 December 2022 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Basel Switzerland | |
NCT02601313 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Relapsed/refractory mantle cell lymphoma | Phase 2 | Active, not recruiting | 105 | July 2025 | Kite, A Gilead Company | |
NCT02614066 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Relapsed/refractory B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Active, not recruiting | 125 | November 2034 | Kite, A Gilead Company | |
NCT02631044 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Non-Hodgkin lymphoma, diffuse large B cell lymphoma, follicular lymphoma, mantle-cell lymphoma, primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma | Phase 1 | Active, not recruiting | 385 | 10 May 2024 | Juno Therapeutics, a Subsidiary of Celgene, Seattle, WA, USA | |
NCT02926833 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells in combination with PD-1 antibodies | DLBCL | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Completed | 37 | 12 January 2023 | Kite, A Gilead Company | |
NCT03105336 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Refractory/relapse large B cell lymphoma | Phase 2 | Active, not recruiting | 159 | Spetember 2036 | Kite, A Gilead Company | |
NCT03287817 | CD19- and CD22-specific CAR-T cells, followed by anti-PD1 antibody | DLBCL | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Active, not recruiting | 73 | November 2024 | Autolus Limited, London, UK | |
NCT03310619 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Aggressive B-NHL | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Completed | 62 | 15 February 2023 | Celgene, Summit, NJ, USA | |
NCT03568461 | CD19-specific CAR-T cells | Refractory follicular lymphoma | Phase 2 | Active, not recruiting | 98 | 22 May 2025 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals | |
NCT00004178 | CEA CAR | Adenocarcinoma | Solid tumor | Phase 1 | Completed | Not given | December 2001 | Roger Williams Medical Center, Providence, RI, USA |
NCT00019136 | Folate receptor CAR ± IL-2 | Ovarian cancer | Phase 1 | Completed | Not given | Not given | National Cancer Institute (NCI), Rockville, MD, USA | |
NCT00085930 | GD2 CAR, EBV T cells | Neuroblastoma | Phase 1 | Active, not recruiting | 19 | December 2023 | Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA | |
NCT00730613 | IL-13Ra2 targeting CAR-T cells | Glioblastoma with Hy/TK suicide switch | Phase 1 | Completed | 3 | August 2011 | City of Hope Medical Center, Duarte, CA, USA | |
NCT00889954 | HER2 CAR, EBV T cells + TGFb DNR | HER2-positive lung cancer | Phase 1 | Completed | 20 | 21 January 2018 | Baylor College of Medicine | |
NCT00902044 | HER2 CD28 CAR | HER2-positive sarcoma | Phase 1 | Active, not recruiting | 36 | July 2032 | Baylor College of Medicine | |
NCT01109095 | Her2 CAR, CMV T cells | HER2-positive glioblastoma | Phase 1 | Completed | 16 | 7 March 2018 | Baylor College of Medicine | |
NCT01140373 | PSMA CAR 2nd | Castrate metastatic | Phase 1 | Active, not recruiting | 13 | June 2024 | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA | |
NCT01373047 | CEA CAR | CEA-positive liver metastases | Phase 1 | Completed | 8 | July 2013 | Roger Williams Medical Center | |
NCT01454596 | EGFRvIII CAR 3rd 28 and 4-1BB ± IL-2 | Glioblastoma | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Completed | 18 | 17 January 2019 | National Cancer Institute (NCI) | |
NCT01460901 | GD2 CAR multivirus specific | Post-allo HSCT neuroblastoma | Phase 1 | Completed | 5 | January 2015 | Children’s Mercy Hospital Kansas City, Kanzas City, MO, USA | |
NCT01822652 | GD-2-CAR-T with iCaspase9 Suicide safety switch | Neuroblastoma | Phase 1 | Active, not recruiting | 11 | October 2030 | Baylor College of Medicine | |
NCT02414269 | Meso-CART cells, modified with iCasp9/M284 | Malignant pleural disease | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Active, not recruiting | 113 | 30 April 2024 | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | |
NCT03170141 | EGFRvIlI-specific CAR-T cells producing PD-1 and PD-L1 antibodies | Glioblastoma multiforme | Phase 1 | Enrolling by invitation | 20 | 31 Decemebr 2023 | Shenzhen Geno-Immune Medical Institute, Shenzhen, China |
Limitations | Potential Strategy | Supporting Reports | References |
---|---|---|---|
Antigen escape | Targeting multiple antigens | In preclinical trails, CAR-T cells targeting both CD19 and CD22 antigens in ALL/DLBCL and CAR-T cells targeting both CD19 and BCMA antigens in multiple myeloma have shown promising results. | [65,66,67,68] |
Similarly, in solid tumors, CAR-T cells targeting both HER2 and IL13Ra2 antigens in glioblastoma and CAR-T cells targeting both HER2 and MUC1 in breast cancer showed better antitumor effects compared to targeting a single antigen. | [56,69] | ||
On-target/off-tumor effects | Targeting tumor-associated antigens that are post-translationally modified and only express in tumors | Different post-translationally modified tumor associated antigens such as TAG72, B7-H3, MUC1, and MUC16 have been targeted using CAR-T-cell therapy which showed very effective. | [56,57,58,59,60,61] |
Targeting two antigens rather than one antigen | Engineered CAR-T cells with synthetic Notch receptors to activate CAR targeting of the second antigen in the presence of the first antigen. | [54,70] | |
Engineered CAR-T cells to sense high antigen densities in tumors | Engineered CAR-T cells with synthetic Notch receptors to activate CAR in a high antigen threshold. | [55] | |
Poor CAR-T-cell trafficking and tumor infiltration | Local administration vs. systemic delivery | Better antitumor effects were noted via the local delivery of CAR-T cells in glioblastoma cancer patients and the systemic delivery of CAR-T cells in mesothelioma patients. | [38,71,72] |
Expressing chemokine receptors on CAR-T cells that respond to tumor-derived chemokines | CAR-T cells that express CXCR1/CXCR2 enhanced trafficking and significantly improved antitumor efficacy. | [73,74,75] | |
Genetically modified CAR-T cells that express proteins that help in the penetration of tumor stoma | CAR-T cells that express heparanase or CAR-T cells that target fibroblast activation protein have shown enhanced infiltration and antitumor activity. | [76,77] | |
Immunosuppressive TME | Combination checkpoint blockade with CAR-T-cell therapy | Administration of PD-1 inhibitor with CD19 CAR-T-cell therapy showed improved CAR-T-cell persistence in B-ALL patients. | [78] |
Likewise, in solid tumors, checkpoint blockade has been combined with CAR-T therapy and shown improved persistence of CAR-T cells. | [79,80] | ||
Engineering CAR-T cells to provide immunostimulatory signals to the TME | Better response was observed when CAR-T cells were genetically engineered to express immunostimulatory molecules like IL-12 and IL-15 and redirect immunosuppressive molecules like IL-4 | [81,82,83] | |
Genetic alteration of CAR-T cells to make them resistant to immunosuppressive factors like TGF β. | [84] | ||
CAR-T-cell therapy associated toxicities | Altering CAR structure to ameliorate toxicity | Decreasing CAR antigen-binding domain affinity to micromolar affinity. | [85] |
Modulation of cytokine secretion via modifying the CAR hinge and transmembrane regions. | [86] | ||
Tailoring the costimulatory domain of CAR based on tumor type, tumor burden, antigen density, etc. | [87] | ||
CAR-mediated immune response can be decreased using human/humanized antibody fragments instead of murine-derived CARs. | [88,89] | ||
Modifying CAR transduced T cells and neurotoxicity | Inhibition of macrophage-activating and monocyte-activating cytokine GM-CSF with lenzilumab decreases cytokine-release syndrome and neurotoxicity. | [90,91] | |
Administration of IL-1 receptor antagonists reduced a form of neuroinflammation in leukemia/lymphoma mouse models. | [92] | ||
CAR “off-switches” | CAR constructs engineered to express CD20 that helped with the depletion of CAR-T cells via rituximab treatment. | [93] | |
Dasatinib treatment has exciting potential, as it provides the temporary inhibition of CAR-T-cell function. | [94] |
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Majumder, A. Evolving CAR-T-Cell Therapy for Cancer Treatment: From Scientific Discovery to Cures. Cancers 2024, 16, 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16010039
Majumder A. Evolving CAR-T-Cell Therapy for Cancer Treatment: From Scientific Discovery to Cures. Cancers. 2024; 16(1):39. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16010039
Chicago/Turabian StyleMajumder, Avisek. 2024. "Evolving CAR-T-Cell Therapy for Cancer Treatment: From Scientific Discovery to Cures" Cancers 16, no. 1: 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16010039
APA StyleMajumder, A. (2024). Evolving CAR-T-Cell Therapy for Cancer Treatment: From Scientific Discovery to Cures. Cancers, 16(1), 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16010039