The John van Geest Cancer Research Centre, School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
Centre for Health, Ageing and Understanding Disease (CHAUD), School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
Front Immunol. 2020 Oct 15;11:582106. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.582106. eCollection 2020.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most frequently occurring primary brain tumor and has a very poor prognosis, with only around 5% of patients surviving for a period of 5 years or more after diagnosis. Despite aggressive multimodal therapy, consisting mostly of a combination of surgery, radiotherapy, and temozolomide chemotherapy, tumors nearly always recur close to the site of resection. For the past 15 years, very little progress has been made with regards to improving patient survival. Although immunotherapy represents an attractive therapy modality due to the promising pre-clinical results observed, many of these potential immunotherapeutic approaches fail during clinical trials, and to date no immunotherapeutic treatments for GBM have been approved. As for many other difficult to treat cancers, GBM combines a lack of immunogenicity with few mutations and a highly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). Unfortunately, both tumor and immune cells have been shown to contribute towards this immunosuppressive phenotype. In addition, current therapeutics also exacerbate this immunosuppression which might explain the failure of immunotherapy-based clinical trials in the GBM setting. Understanding how these mechanisms interact with one another, as well as how one can increase the anti-tumor immune response by addressing local immunosuppression will lead to better clinical results for immune-based therapeutics. Improving therapeutic delivery across the blood brain barrier also presents a challenge for immunotherapy and future therapies will need to consider this. This review highlights the immunosuppressive mechanisms employed by GBM cancers and examines potential immunotherapeutic treatments that can overcome these significant immunosuppressive hurdles.
多形性胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)是最常见的原发性脑肿瘤,预后非常差,只有约 5%的患者在诊断后 5 年或更长时间内存活。尽管采用了包括手术、放疗和替莫唑胺化疗在内的积极多模式治疗,但肿瘤几乎总是在切除部位附近复发。在过去的 15 年中,在提高患者生存率方面几乎没有取得任何进展。尽管免疫疗法由于观察到有希望的临床前结果而代表了一种有吸引力的治疗方式,但这些潜在的免疫治疗方法中的许多在临床试验中失败,迄今为止,还没有批准用于 GBM 的免疫治疗方法。与许多其他难以治疗的癌症一样,GBM 缺乏免疫原性,突变较少,且肿瘤微环境(TME)高度免疫抑制。不幸的是,肿瘤细胞和免疫细胞都被证明有助于这种免疫抑制表型。此外,目前的治疗方法也加剧了这种免疫抑制,这可能解释了免疫疗法临床试验在 GBM 环境中失败的原因。了解这些机制如何相互作用,以及如何通过解决局部免疫抑制来增强抗肿瘤免疫反应,将为免疫治疗带来更好的临床效果。改善免疫疗法穿过血脑屏障的输送也给治疗带来了挑战,未来的治疗方法将需要考虑这一点。这篇综述强调了 GBM 癌症中使用的免疫抑制机制,并研究了可以克服这些重大免疫抑制障碍的潜在免疫治疗方法。