Recent advances in cancer immunotherapy have renewed interest in oncolytic viruses (OVs) as a synergistic platform for the development of novel antitumor strategies. Cancer cells adopt multiple mechanisms to evade and suppress antitumor immune responses, essentially establishing a non-immunogenic ('cold') tumor microenvironment (TME), with poor T-cell infiltration and low mutational burden. Limitations to the efficacy of immunotherapy still exist, especially for a variety of solid tumors, where new approaches are necessary to overcome physical barriers in the TME and to mitigate adverse effects associated with current immunotherapeutics. OVs offer an attractive alternative by inducing direct oncolysis, immunogenic cell death, and immune stimulation. These multimodal mechanisms make OVs well suited to reprogram non-immunogenic tumors and TME into inflamed, immunogenic ('hot') tumors; enhanced release of tumor antigens by dying cancer cells is expected to augment T-cell infiltration, thereby eliciting potent antitumor immunity. Advances in virus engineering and understanding of tumor biology have allowed the optimization of OV-tumor selectivity, oncolytic potency, and immune stimulation. However, OV antitumor activity is likely to achieve its greatest potential as part of combinatorial strategies with other immune or cancer therapeutics.

Oncolytic Immunotherapy: Can't Start a Fire Without a Spark / Muscolini, Michela; Tassone, Evelyne; Hiscott, John. - In: CYTOKINE & GROWTH FACTOR REVIEWS. - ISSN 1359-6101. - 56:(2020), pp. 94-101. [10.1016/j.cytogfr.2020.07.014]

Oncolytic Immunotherapy: Can't Start a Fire Without a Spark

Michela Muscolini;Evelyne Tassone;
2020

Abstract

Recent advances in cancer immunotherapy have renewed interest in oncolytic viruses (OVs) as a synergistic platform for the development of novel antitumor strategies. Cancer cells adopt multiple mechanisms to evade and suppress antitumor immune responses, essentially establishing a non-immunogenic ('cold') tumor microenvironment (TME), with poor T-cell infiltration and low mutational burden. Limitations to the efficacy of immunotherapy still exist, especially for a variety of solid tumors, where new approaches are necessary to overcome physical barriers in the TME and to mitigate adverse effects associated with current immunotherapeutics. OVs offer an attractive alternative by inducing direct oncolysis, immunogenic cell death, and immune stimulation. These multimodal mechanisms make OVs well suited to reprogram non-immunogenic tumors and TME into inflamed, immunogenic ('hot') tumors; enhanced release of tumor antigens by dying cancer cells is expected to augment T-cell infiltration, thereby eliciting potent antitumor immunity. Advances in virus engineering and understanding of tumor biology have allowed the optimization of OV-tumor selectivity, oncolytic potency, and immune stimulation. However, OV antitumor activity is likely to achieve its greatest potential as part of combinatorial strategies with other immune or cancer therapeutics.
2020
Oncolytic virus, immunotherapy, immune checkpoint
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01g Articolo di rassegna (Review)
Oncolytic Immunotherapy: Can't Start a Fire Without a Spark / Muscolini, Michela; Tassone, Evelyne; Hiscott, John. - In: CYTOKINE & GROWTH FACTOR REVIEWS. - ISSN 1359-6101. - 56:(2020), pp. 94-101. [10.1016/j.cytogfr.2020.07.014]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1633078
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