Dept of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, 1550 Orleans St, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
Dept of Urology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, 1550 Orleans St., Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
Vaccine. 2021 Dec 8;39(50):7321-7331. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.09.040. Epub 2021 Sep 27.
Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine is an attenuated live strain of Mycobacterium bovis. It may be the most widely used vaccine in human history and is the only licensed human tuberculosis (TB) vaccine available. Despite its excellent safety history, a century of use in global vaccination programs, and its significant contribution to reducing TB mortality among children, the efficacy of BCG continues to be disputed due to its incomplete protection against pulmonary TB in adults. Still vaccines offer the best chance to contain the ongoing spread of multi-drug resistance TB and disease dissemination. The development of improved vaccines against TB therefore remains a high global priority. Interestingly, recent studies indicate that genetically modified BCG, or administration of existing BCG through alternate routes, or revaccination, offers improved protection, suggesting that BCG is well poised to make a comeback. Intravesical BCG is also the only approved microbial immunotherapy for any form of cancer, and is the first-line therapy for treatment-naïve non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMBIC), which represents a majority of the new bladder cancer cases diagnosed. However, almost a third of patients with NMIBC are either BCG unresponsive or have tumor recurrence, leading to a higher risk of disease progression. With very few advances in intravesical therapy over the past two decades for early-stage disease, and a limited pipeline of therapeutics in Phase 3 or late Phase 2 development, there is a major unmet need for improved intravesical therapies for NMIBC. Indeed, genetically modified candidate BCG vaccines engineered to express molecules that confer stronger protection against pulmonary TB or induce potent anti-tumor immunity in NMIBC have shown promise in both pre-clinical and clinical settings. This review discusses the development of second generation, genetically modified BCG candidates as TB vaccines and as anti-tumor adjuvant therapy for NMIBC.
卡介苗(BCG)疫苗是一种减毒活的牛分枝杆菌菌株。它可能是人类历史上使用最广泛的疫苗,也是唯一获得许可的人类结核病(TB)疫苗。尽管卡介苗具有出色的安全历史、在全球疫苗接种计划中使用了一个世纪,并且在降低儿童结核病死亡率方面做出了重大贡献,但由于其对成人肺结核的保护作用不完全,其功效仍存在争议。尽管如此,疫苗仍然是遏制耐多药结核病和疾病传播的最佳途径。因此,开发针对结核病的改良疫苗仍然是全球的高度优先事项。有趣的是,最近的研究表明,遗传修饰的卡介苗、通过替代途径给予现有的卡介苗或重新接种卡介苗,提供了更好的保护作用,这表明卡介苗很有希望卷土重来。膀胱内卡介苗也是唯一批准用于任何形式癌症的微生物免疫疗法,是治疗初治非肌肉浸润性膀胱癌(NMIBC)的一线疗法,NMIBC 占新诊断膀胱癌病例的大多数。然而,几乎三分之一的 NMIBC 患者对卡介苗无反应或肿瘤复发,导致疾病进展的风险更高。在过去二十年中,针对早期疾病的膀胱内治疗几乎没有进展,而在 3 期或晚期 2 期开发阶段的治疗方法有限,因此,对 NMIBC 的改良膀胱内治疗存在重大未满足的需求。事实上,为了表达更强的抗肺结核保护作用或在 NMIBC 中诱导有效的抗肿瘤免疫作用而设计的第二代遗传修饰卡介苗候选疫苗,在临床前和临床环境中都显示出了前景。这篇综述讨论了第二代遗传修饰卡介苗候选疫苗作为结核病疫苗和 NMIBC 的抗肿瘤佐剂治疗的发展。