1. Treatment of melanoma with a serotype 5/3 chimeric oncolytic adenovirus coding for GM-CSF: Resultsin vitro, in rodents and in humans
- Author
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Otto Hemminki, Anniina Koski, Simona Bramante, Raita Heiskanen, Markus Vähä-Koskela, Ville Veckman, Dirk M. Nettelbeck, Akseli Hemminki, Vincenzo Cerullo, Sari Pesonen, Anna Kanerva, Sampsa Matikainen, Ilkka Liikanen, Johanna K. Kaufmann, Timo Joensuu, Lotta Vassilev, and Minna Oksanen
- Subjects
Oncolytic adenovirus ,Cancer Research ,Chemotherapy ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Melanoma ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Virus ,3. Good health ,Oncolytic virus ,Oncology ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,business ,Progressive disease - Abstract
Metastatic melanoma is refractory to irradiation and chemotherapy, but amenable to immunological approaches such as immune-checkpoint-inhibiting antibodies or adoptive cell therapies. Oncolytic virus replication is an immunogenic phenomenon, and viruses can be armed with immunostimulatory molecules. Therefore, oncolytic immuno-virotherapy of malignant melanoma is an appealing approach, which was recently validated by a positive phase 3 trial. We investigated the potency of oncolytic adenovirus Ad5/3-D24-GMCSF on a panel of melanoma cell lines and animal models, and summarized the melanoma-specific human data from the Advanced Therapy Access Program (ATAP). The virus effectively eradicated human melanoma cells in vitro and subcutaneous SK-MEL-28 melanoma xenografts in nude mice when combined with low-dose cyclophosphamide. Furthermore, virally-expressed granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) stimulated the differentiation of human monocytes into macrophages. In contrast to human cells, RPMI 1846 hamster melanoma cells exhibited no response to oncolytic viruses and the chimeric 5/3 fiber failed to increase the efficacy of transduction, suggesting limited utility of the hamster model in the context of viruses with this capsid. In ATAP, treatments appeared safe and well-tolerated. Four out of nine melanoma patients treated were evaluable for possible therapy benefit with modified RECIST criteria: one patient had minor response, two had stable disease, and one had progressive disease. Two patients were alive at 559 and 2,149 days after treatment. Ad5/3-D24-GMCSF showed promising efficacy in preclinical studies and possible antitumor activity in melanoma patients refractory to other forms of therapy. This data supports continuing the clinical development of oncolytic adenoviruses for treatment of malignant melanoma.
- Published
- 2015