Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Department of Medicine, Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Mol Carcinog. 2020 Jul;59(7):807-821. doi: 10.1002/mc.23190. Epub 2020 Mar 27.
Great strides have been made in cancer immunotherapy including the breakthrough successes of anti-PD-(L)1 checkpoint inhibitors. In Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), a rare and aggressive skin cancer, PD-(L)1 blockade is highly effective. Yet, ~50% of patients either do not respond to therapy or develop PD-(L)1 refractory disease and, thus, do not experience long-term benefit. For these patients, additional or combination therapies are needed to augment immune responses that target and eliminate cancer cells. Therapeutic vaccines targeting tumor-associated antigens, mutated self-antigens, or immunogenic viral oncoproteins are currently being developed to augment T-cell responses. Approximately 80% of MCC cases in the United States are driven by the ongoing expression of viral T-antigen (T-Ag) oncoproteins from genomically integrated Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV). Since T-Ag elicits specific B- and T-cell immune responses in most persons with virus-positive MCC (VP-MCC), and ongoing T-Ag expression is required to drive VP-MCC cell proliferation, therapeutic vaccination with T-Ag is a rational potential component of immunotherapy. Failure of the endogenous T-cell response to clear VP-MCC (allowing clinically evident tumors to arise) implies that therapeutic vaccination will need to be potent anśd synergize with other mechanisms to enhance T-cell activity against tumor cells. Here, we review the relevant underlying biology of VP-MCC, potentially applicable therapeutic vaccine platforms, and antigen delivery formats. We also describe early successes in the field of therapeutic cancer vaccines and address several clinical scenarios in which VP-MCC patients could potentially benefit from a therapeutic vaccine.
在癌症免疫疗法方面已经取得了重大进展,包括抗 PD-(L)1 检查点抑制剂的突破性成功。在默克尔细胞癌 (MCC) 中,这是一种罕见且侵袭性的皮肤癌,PD-(L)1 阻断剂非常有效。然而,约 50%的患者要么对治疗无反应,要么发展为 PD-(L)1 难治性疾病,因此无法获得长期益处。对于这些患者,需要额外的或联合治疗来增强针对和消除癌细胞的免疫反应。目前正在开发针对肿瘤相关抗原、突变自身抗原或免疫原性病毒癌蛋白的治疗性疫苗,以增强 T 细胞反应。在美国,大约 80%的 MCC 病例是由持续表达病毒 T 抗原 (T-Ag) 癌蛋白驱动的,这些癌蛋白来自基因组整合的默克尔细胞多瘤病毒 (MCPyV)。由于 T-Ag 在大多数病毒阳性 MCC (VP-MCC) 患者中引发特异性 B 和 T 细胞免疫反应,并且持续的 T-Ag 表达是驱动 VP-MCC 细胞增殖所必需的,因此用 T-Ag 进行治疗性疫苗接种是一种合理的免疫治疗潜在成分。内源性 T 细胞反应未能清除 VP-MCC(允许临床明显的肿瘤出现)意味着治疗性疫苗接种将需要强大,并与其他机制协同作用,以增强 T 细胞对肿瘤细胞的活性。在这里,我们回顾了 VP-MCC 的相关基础生物学、潜在的适用治疗性疫苗平台和抗原传递形式。我们还描述了治疗性癌症疫苗领域的早期成功,并探讨了 VP-MCC 患者可能从治疗性疫苗中受益的几种临床情况。