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Oncolytic Adenoviruses: The Cold War against Cancer Finally Turns Hot

Bryan Oronsky, Brian Gastman, Anthony P. Conley, Christopher M. Reid, Scott Caroen, Tony Reid

2022Cancers29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Oncolytic viruses, colloquially referred to as "living drugs", amplify themselves and the therapeutic transgenes that they carry to stimulate an immune response both locally and systemically. Remarkable exceptions aside, such as the recent 14-patient trial with the PD-1 inhibitor, dostarlimab, in mismatch repair (MMR) deficient rectal cancer, where the complete response rate was 100%, checkpoint inhibitors are not cure-alls, which suggests the need for a combination partner like oncolytic viruses to prime and augment their activity. This review focuses on adenoviruses, the most clinically investigated of all the oncolytic viruses. It covers specific design features of clinical adenoviral candidates and highlights their potential both alone and in combination with checkpoint inhibitors in clinical trials to turn immunologically "cold" and unresponsive tumors into "hotter" and more responsive ones through a domino effect. Finally, a "mix-and-match" combination of therapies based on the paradigm of the cancer-immunity cycle is proposed to augment the immune responses of oncolytic adenoviruses.

Topics & Concepts

Oncolytic virusOncolytic adenovirusCancerMedicineCombination therapyImmune checkpointClinical trialImmune systemImmunotherapyCancer researchVirologyImmunologyInternal medicineVirus-based gene therapy researchCAR-T cell therapy researchCancer Research and Treatments
Oncolytic Adenoviruses: The Cold War against Cancer Finally Turns Hot | Litcius