Dahlberg Carin I M, Sarhan Dhifaf, Chrobok Michael, Duru Adil D, Alici Evren
Cell Therapies Institute, Nova Southeastern University , Fort Lauderdale, FL , USA ; Cell and Gene Therapy Group, Center for Hematology and Regenerative Medicine (HERM), Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, NOVUM , Stockholm , Sweden.
Oncology-Pathology, Cancer Center Karolinska, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm , Sweden ; Division of Hematology, Oncology and Transplantation, Masonic Cancer Research Center, University of Minnesota , Minnesota, MN , USA.
Front Immunol. 2015 Nov 30;6:605. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00605. eCollection 2015.
Natural killer (NK) cells were discovered 40 years ago, by their ability to recognize and kill tumor cells without the requirement of prior antigen exposure. Since then, NK cells have been seen as promising agents for cell-based cancer therapies. However, NK cells represent only a minor fraction of the human lymphocyte population. Their skewed phenotype and impaired functionality during cancer progression necessitates the development of clinical protocols to activate and expand to high numbers ex vivo to be able to infuse sufficient numbers of functional NK cells to the cancer patients. Initial NK cell-based clinical trials suggested that NK cell-infusion is safe and feasible with almost no NK cell-related toxicity, including graft-versus-host disease. Complete remission and increased disease-free survival is shown in a small number of patients with hematological malignances. Furthermore, successful adoptive NK cell-based therapies from haploidentical donors have been demonstrated. Disappointingly, only limited anti-tumor effects have been demonstrated following NK cell infusion in patients with solid tumors. While NK cells have great potential in targeting tumor cells, the efficiency of NK cell functions in the tumor microenvironment is yet unclear. The failure of immune surveillance may in part be due to sustained immunological pressure on tumor cells resulting in the development of tumor escape variants that are invisible to the immune system. Alternatively, this could be due to the complex network of immune-suppressive compartments in the tumor microenvironment, including myeloid-derived suppressor cells, tumor-associated macrophages, and regulatory T cells. Although the negative effect of the tumor microenvironment on NK cells can be transiently reverted by ex vivo expansion and long-term activation, the aforementioned NK cell/tumor microenvironment interactions upon reinfusion are not fully elucidated. Within this context, genetic modification of NK cells may provide new possibilities for developing effective cancer immunotherapies by improving NK cell responses and making them less susceptible to the tumor microenvironment. Within this review, we will discuss clinical trials using NK cells with a specific reflection on novel potential strategies, such as genetic modification of NK cells and complementary therapies aimed at improving the clinical outcome of NK cell-based immune therapies.
自然杀伤(NK)细胞于40年前被发现,因其能够识别并杀死肿瘤细胞,且无需预先接触抗原。从那时起,NK细胞就被视为基于细胞的癌症治疗的有前景的药物。然而,NK细胞仅占人类淋巴细胞群体的一小部分。它们在癌症进展过程中偏斜的表型和受损的功能,使得有必要开发临床方案,以便在体外激活并大量扩增,从而能够向癌症患者输注足够数量的功能性NK细胞。最初基于NK细胞的临床试验表明,输注NK细胞是安全可行的,几乎没有与NK细胞相关的毒性,包括移植物抗宿主病。少数血液系统恶性肿瘤患者出现了完全缓解和无病生存期延长的情况。此外,已经证明了来自单倍体同基因供体的基于NK细胞的成功过继性治疗。令人失望的是,在实体瘤患者中输注NK细胞后仅显示出有限的抗肿瘤作用。虽然NK细胞在靶向肿瘤细胞方面具有巨大潜力,但NK细胞在肿瘤微环境中的功能效率尚不清楚。免疫监视的失败可能部分归因于对肿瘤细胞持续的免疫压力,导致免疫系统无法识别的肿瘤逃逸变体的产生。或者,这可能是由于肿瘤微环境中复杂的免疫抑制区室网络,包括髓系来源的抑制细胞、肿瘤相关巨噬细胞和调节性T细胞。尽管肿瘤微环境对NK细胞的负面影响可以通过体外扩增和长期激活暂时逆转,但再输注后上述NK细胞/肿瘤微环境相互作用尚未完全阐明。在此背景下,NK细胞的基因改造可能为开发有效的癌症免疫疗法提供新的可能性,通过改善NK细胞反应并使其对肿瘤微环境更不敏感。在这篇综述中,我们将讨论使用NK细胞的临床试验,并特别反思新的潜在策略,如NK细胞的基因改造和旨在改善基于NK细胞的免疫疗法临床结果的辅助疗法。