Lecture 16: Immunotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

How can the immune system contribute to the antitumour Response

A
  • By destroying Viruses that are known to transform cells (viral antigens
    displayed on MHC I-eg HPV and cervical cancer)
  • By Eliminating Pathogens to Reduce the pro-tumour inflammation
    (pathogen-inflammation-cancer link). 20% of all cancers are now thought to
    be associated with microbial infection.
  • By identifying and destroying cancerous cells mediated by immune ‘killer’
    cells.
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2
Q

Tumour immune profile

A

Bad vs. Good
M2 Macrophages
Myeloid Derived Suppressor Cells
(MDSCs)
Th2 cells
Treg cells

vs.

Cross-presenting APCs
NK cells
Th1
CD8+ CTL response

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3
Q

Tumour escape mechanisms

A
  • Loss of Tumour Ag
  • Loss of MHC I or NKG2D ligands
  • Loss of IFNg responsiveness (pathway defects)
  • Inhibition of DC maturation/function
  • Loss of costimulatory molecules (eg increase CTLA4)
  • Increase Treg Activity
  • MDSC
  • Immunomodulatory molecules (eg IL10, TGFb IDO)
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4
Q

Two classes of tumour antigens

A

Tumour specific antigens and tumour associated antigens

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5
Q

Tumour-specific antigens

A
  • Occur only in neoplastic cells
  • Not expressed by normal cells at any site or at any stage of development
  • Recognised as non-self by CD8+ CTLs
  • Includes mutated cellular proteins (e.g. mutant p53, erbb family members) –
    antigen processing leads to expression of novel peptides presented by
    MHC class I
  • Virally derived antigens – HPV E6 and E7 proteins are found in 80% of
    invasive cervical cancers – success of HPV vaccine
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6
Q

Tumour-associated antigens

A
  • TAAs are normal cellular proteins with unique expression patterns
  • Only expressed at specific sites or at stages of development (e.g. fetal
    development) or at very low levels in normal cells
  • Re-expression of fetal or embryonic genes are called oncofetal tumour
    antigens (normally expressed prior to immune system acquires
    immunocompetence), e.g. carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)
  • 90% of patients with advanced CRC have increased CEA in their serum
  • TAAs may be oncogenes that expressed at abnormally high levels – EGFR
    and HER2
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7
Q

Innate immune cells and the anti-tumour response- NK CELLS

A
  • NK cell deficient mice increased lymphomas/sarcomas
  • Chediak-Higashi Syndrome-increase in cancers-impairment in NK cells.
  • NK cells Kill tumour cells:
  • showing reduced MHC I expression-’missing self’ recognition by NK cells detected by KIRs (killer cell
    immunoglobulin-like receptors).
  • NK cells kill tumours that that overexpress ligands for activating NK receptors NKG2D.
  • IFNg secretion-stimulates CTL response
  • NK cells also involved in ADCC (antibody dependent cell mediated cytotoxicity)
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8
Q

Innate immune cells and the anti-tumour response-Macrophages M1 (Classical)

A

IFNg drives M1 phenotype-ADCC and secrete cytokines (TNFa, IL-12, IL23) which exert
cytotoxic activity on tumour cells, high MHCII/costimulatory molecules (APCs). Secrete
chemokines that lead to Th1, CTL recruitment, NK cells

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9
Q

T cells and the anti-tumour response

A
  • Strong anti-tumour CTL (CD8+) activity correlates significantly with tumour remission and is thought
    to maintain a state of immune mediated neoplastic cell dormancy-during this period neoplastic cells
    are selected that are less immunogenic to evade tumour immune response
  • Th1 cells secrete IFNg which promotes M1 macrophage response and IFNg increases MHC I
    expression which facilitates CTL recognition of tumour antigens.
  • Th17 cells secrete IL-17-leads to secretion of pro-angiogenic factors-studies also show anti-tumour
    effects
  • TILs-prognostic indicator.
  • GOOD=High numbers of NK cells, CTLs is a good prognostic indicator in ovarian cancerincreased survival time.
  • BAD=High Treg (freq correlates with tumour grade) and MDSCs
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10
Q

B cells and anti-tumour response

A
  • B cells can secrete anti-tumour antibodies
  • ADCC by NK cells and macrophages
  • However, B cells can block CTL response by masking
    tumour antigens
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11
Q

How cancer can evade the immune system

A
  1. Active immunosuppression in tumour environment
  2. Chronic inflammation
  3. Evasion of immune recognition and activation
  4. Tumour cell avoidance of apoptotic signals
  5. Poor co-stimulatory signals provided by tumour cells
  6. Expression of co-inhibitory molecules
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12
Q

Active immunosuppression in tumour environment

A
  • Dampening of immune response by M2 macrophages, MDSCs, Tregs and Th2 cells
  • IL-4 drives M2 phenotype which release immune dampening cytokine secretion-IL-10,
    chemokines which lead to Treg and Th2 recruitment. Pro-angiogenic factors (VEGF)
    and growth factors (EGF, FGF) released by M2 macrophages
  • NK cells can be defective at tumour site
  • Neutrophils secrete VEGF and proteinases elastase and MMP-8 and MMP-9
  • MDSCs are immature cells comprised of precursors of macrophages, granulocytes,
    DCs, and myeloid cells at earlier stages of differentiation
  • Tumours secrete factors to promote MDSC expansion – MDSCs induce CD8+ T cell
    tolerance, block NK cell cytotoxicity, and polarize immunity toward tumour promoting
    phenotype (down-regulation of IL-12 and production of IL-10)
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13
Q

Chronic inflammation

A
  • Increases cellular stress and can lead to genotoxic stress,
    thereby increasing mutation rate
  • Growth factors and cytokines released by leukocytes can
    also lead to increased tumour growth
  • Inlammation is pro-angiogenic
  • Obesity and chronic inflammation – cancer link
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14
Q

Tumour cell evade immune recognition and
activation

A
  • Reduced MHC I/tumour antigen expression on tumour cells
  • Secretion of TSAs
  • Defective TAP or b2macroglobulin
  • IFNg insensitivity
  • NK cells should step in to kill these cells but tumour cells show
    decreased expression of ligands that bind activating receptors on
    NK cells
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15
Q

Tumour cell avoidance of apoptotic signals

A
  • Upregulation of anti-apoptotic mediators
  • Down-regulation or expression of non-functioning FAS receptor on
    tumour cells
  • Secretion of soluble form FAS receptor
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16
Q

Poor co-stimulatory signals provided by tumour
cells

A
  • T cell activation requires 2 signals-tumour cells are self cells tend to
    lack co-stimulatory molecules.
  • Need APCs in the tumour vicinity to activate T cells. Recent therapy
    aims to enhance the co-stimulation provided to T cells.
17
Q

Expression of co-inhibitory molecules

A
  • Immune checkpoints are cell surface molecules that regulate
    immune response
  • Ligands on tumour cells can dampen immune response –
    result in T cell exhaustion e.g. PD-L1 and B7
18
Q

Cancer immunotherapy

A

Reactivating the immune system to kill cancer

19
Q

1891 – Coley’s toxins

A
  • William Coley injected bacteria into inoperable tumour of one
    of his patients-remission observed.
  • Immunostimulatory molecules in “Coley’s toxins” mechanistic
    basis to success-early form of immunotherapy.
  • Immunotherapy-enhances the anti-tumour response
  • This approach is used today with BCG therapy for bladder
    cancer (delivered via catheter to activate immune response)
20
Q

Targeting the immune system

A

-Tumours evade the immune system/immune surveillance
- T cells have an exhausted phenotype in the tissue and no longer attack the tumour
- The immune response is halted due to expression of immunoregulatory proteins on T cells and tumour cells
Immune checkpoint inhibitors are being designed to reactivate the immune response

21
Q

Targeting the immune system – CTLA4

A
  • CTLA4 on T cells – CD80/86 on APC cells binding leads to T cell
    inhibition
  • Monoclonal antibody against CTLA4 used to treat metastatic
    melanoma, kidney cancer, esophageal cancer etc.
  • Ipilimumab (fully humanized monoclonal antibody IgG1 to CTLA4)
22
Q

Ipilimumab –CTLA4 mAb

A
  • Ipilimumab (fully humanized monoclonal antibody IgG1 to CTLA4)
  • CTLA4 expressed on activated T cells
  • CTLA4 competes with CD28 for binding with CD80 and CD86
    (B7-1 and B7-2) expressed on APCs
  • CTLA4 inhibits cell proliferation, cytokine production, and cell
    cycle progression
  • Improved OS in metastatic melanoma
  • Immune-related adverse events
23
Q

PD-1/PD-L1 blockade

A
  • PD-1 on T cells, B cells,
    monocytes
  • PD-1 binds to PD-L1 and
    PD-L2 – inhibitory
    immune checkpoint
  • Nivolumab and
    pembrolizumab are antiPD-1 antibodies
  • Atezolizumab is a PD-L1
    mAb
24
Q

Combination therapies

A
  • Combinatorial immunotherapies
  • Immunotherapy plus chemotherapy (rationale?)
  • Immunotherapies plus targeted therapies