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Comparison of Clinically Relevant Oncolytic Virus Platforms for Enhancing T Cell Therapy of Solid Tumors

Authors :
Victor Cervera-Carrascon
Dafne C.A. Quixabeira
Riikka Havunen
Joao M. Santos
Emma Kutvonen
James H.A. Clubb
Mikko Siurala
Camilla Heiniƶ
Sadia Zafar
Teija Koivula
Dave Lumen
Marjo Vaha
Arturo Garcia-Horsman
Anu J. Airaksinen
Suvi Sorsa
Marjukka Anttila
Veijo Hukkanen
Anna Kanerva
Akseli Hemminki
Source :
Molecular Therapy: Oncolytics, Vol 17, Iss , Pp 47-60 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Despite some promising results, the majority of patients do not benefit from T cell therapies, as tumors prevent T cells from entering the tumor, shut down their activity, or downregulate key antigens. Due to their nature and mechanism of action, oncolytic viruses have features that can help overcome many of the barriers currently facing T cell therapies of solid tumors. This study aims to understand how four different oncolytic viruses (adenovirus, vaccinia virus, herpes simplex virus, and reovirus) perform in that task. For that purpose, an immunocompetent in vivo tumor model featuring adoptive tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy was used. Tumor growth control (p < 0.001) and survival analyses suggest that adenovirus was most effective in enabling T cell therapy. The complete response rate was 62% for TILs + adenovirus versus 17.5% for TILs + PBS. Of note, TIL biodistribution did not explain efficacy differences between viruses. Instead, immunostimulatory shifts in the tumor microenvironment mirrored efficacy results. Overall, the use of oncolytic viruses can improve the utility of T cell therapies, and additional virus engineering by arming with transgenes can provide further antitumor effects. This phenomenon was seen when an unarmed oncolytic adenovirus was compared to Ad5/3-E2F-d24-hTNFa-IRES-hIL2 (TILT-123). A clinical trial is ongoing, where patients receiving TIL treatment also receive TILT-123 (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04217473).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23727705
Volume :
17
Issue :
47-60
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Therapy: Oncolytics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fe9dd0679d8f4d2392893fc0b76cdcb8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.omto.2020.03.003