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Head and Neck Cancer Immunotherapy beyond the Checkpoint Blockade
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Metadata
Document Title
Head and Neck Cancer Immunotherapy beyond the Checkpoint Blockade
Author
Heath BR, Michmerhuizen NL, Donnelly CR, Sansanaphongpricha K, Sun D, Brenner JC, Lei YL
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC); University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Michigan System; University of Michigan
Type
Review
Source Title
JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
ISSN
0022-0345
Year
2019
Volume
98
Issue
10
Page
1073-1080
Open Access
Green Published
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI
10.1177/0022034519864112
Format
Abstract
The success of immune checkpoint receptor blockade has brought exciting promises for the treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). While patients who respond to checkpoint inhibitors tend to develop a durable response, <15% of patients with HNSCC respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors, underscoring the critical need to alleviate cancer resistance to immunotherapy. Major advances have been made to elucidate the intrinsic and adaptive resistance mechanisms to immunotherapy. Central genomic events in HNSCC have been found to possess previously unknown roles in suppressing immune sensing. Such inhibitory function affects both the innate and adaptive arms of tumor-specific immunity. While checkpoint blockade effectively reinvigorates adaptive T-cell responses, additional targeting of the oncogenic inhibitors of innate immune sensing likely informs a novel and potent strategy for immune priming. This review discusses the recent advances on the identification of key HNSCC oncogenes that impair antitumor immunity and emerging immune-priming approaches that sensitize poorly immunogenic HNSCCs to checkpoint blockade. These approaches include but are not limited to cancer vaccine systems utilizing novel type I interferon agonists as immune adjuvants, radiation, DNA damage-inducing agents, and metabolic reprogramming. The goal of these multipronged approaches is to expand tumor-specific effector T-cells, break checkpoint receptor-mediated tolerance, and metabolically support sustained T-cell activation. The translation of therapeutics that reverses oncogenic inhibition of immune sensing requires thorough characterization of the HNSCC regulators of innate immune sensors, development of additional immunocompetent HNSCC mouse models, as well as engineering of more robust immune adjuvant delivery systems. Built on the success of checkpoint blockade, validation of novel immune-priming approaches holds key promises to expand the pool of responders to immunotherapy.
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Funding Sponsor
National Institutes of Health [R01 DE026728, R00 DE024173, R03 DE027399, U01 DE025184, F31 DE028740]; Rogel Cancer Center Research Committee grant; NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF DENTAL & CRANIOFACIAL RESEARCH [R03DE027399, U01DE025184, R00DE024173, R01DE026728, F31DE028740] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
Publication Source
WOS