Botta Gregory P, Granowicz Eric, Costantini Carrie
Division of Hematology/Oncology, Scripps Clinic, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
Scripps Mercy Cancer Center, San Diego, CA 92103, USA.
Transl Cancer Res. 2017 Feb;6(1):17-29. doi: 10.21037/tcr.2017.02.09.
Genitourinary (GU) cancers are a group of epithelial malignancies associated with the organs involved in the excretion of urine. Renal cell, urothelial, and prostatic carcinoma are the overwhelming subtypes diagnosed by oncologists. Each of these was traditionally treated surgically when local and non-invasive. When these carcinomas spread, invade, or metastasize, surgical control lacks in efficacy. Chemotherapeutic regimens have been implemented for decades and have increased overall survival but many patients progress. Molecular targeting through tyrosine kinase inhibition of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has emerged as a frontline therapy in kidney cancer with more durable responses. More recently, immunotherapy has begun to find efficacy in many other solid tumors including melanoma and non-small cell lung cancer. The inherent genetic instability of this group of cancers makes them ideal solid tumors for immune modulation. Vaccines manufactured to initiate T-Cell regulation through neoplastic-antigen presentation are available for prostate cancer and are currently on trial in renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Programmed death-1 (PD-1) and its ligand (PD-L1) are intricate members of cellular immunity against neoplastic cells. In an activated, unbound state, these molecules permit T-cell activation and cytotoxic killing of cancer cells. However, when they are linked, cellular immunity is attenuated and local cancer cells are permitted the opportunity to proliferate and invade. A novel class of monoclonal antibodies have been developed which stop PD-1 linkage and thus uncouple the 'stop' signal of these neoplastic regulatory cells. The increased overall and progression free survival have made them attractive options alone as well as in combination with anti-VEGF inhibitors for patients. Although more tolerable than chemotherapy, immunotherapeutics have adverse potential toxicities. Overall, the use of immunomodulatory medications have opened a new paradigm in the anti-neoplastic regimen of GU cancers and further developments will determine the appropriate patient to treat for optimum tumor burden eradication.
泌尿生殖系统(GU)癌症是一组与尿液排泄相关器官有关的上皮性恶性肿瘤。肾细胞癌、尿路上皮癌和前列腺癌是肿瘤学家诊断出的主要亚型。传统上,当这些癌症处于局部且非侵袭性阶段时,均采用手术治疗。当这些癌症发生扩散、侵袭或转移时,手术控制则缺乏疗效。化疗方案已实施数十年,提高了总体生存率,但仍有许多患者病情进展。通过酪氨酸激酶抑制血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)进行分子靶向治疗已成为肾癌的一线治疗方法,疗效更为持久。最近,免疫疗法已开始在包括黑色素瘤和非小细胞肺癌在内的许多其他实体瘤中显示出疗效。这类癌症固有的基因不稳定性使其成为免疫调节的理想实体瘤。通过肿瘤抗原呈递启动T细胞调节而制备的疫苗可用于前列腺癌,目前正在肾细胞癌(RCC)中进行试验。程序性死亡-1(PD-1)及其配体(PD-L1)是针对肿瘤细胞的细胞免疫的复杂组成部分。在激活的、未结合的状态下,这些分子允许T细胞激活并对癌细胞进行细胞毒性杀伤。然而,当它们结合时,细胞免疫会减弱,局部癌细胞有机会增殖和侵袭。已开发出一类新型单克隆抗体,可阻止PD-1结合,从而解除这些肿瘤调节细胞的“停止”信号。总体生存率和无进展生存率的提高使它们成为单独使用以及与抗VEGF抑制剂联合使用对患者有吸引力的选择。尽管免疫疗法比化疗更具耐受性,但仍有潜在的不良毒性。总体而言,免疫调节药物的使用为GU癌症的抗肿瘤治疗方案开辟了新的范例,进一步的发展将确定适合治疗以实现最佳肿瘤负荷消除的患者。