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Regulated intratumoral expression of IL-12 using a RheoSwitch Therapeutic System(®) (RTS(®)) gene switch as gene therapy for the treatment of glioma

The purpose of this study was to determine if localized delivery of IL-12 encoded by a replication-incompetent adenoviral vector engineered to express IL-12 via a RheoSwitch Therapeutic System(®) (RTS(®)) gene switch (Ad-RTS-IL-12) administered intratumorally which is inducibly controlled by the ora...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Barrett, John A., Cai, Hongliang, Miao, John, Khare, Pranay D., Gonzalez, Paul, Dalsing-Hernandez, Jessica, Sharma, Geeta, Chan, Tim, Cooper, Laurence J.N, Lebel, Francois
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group US 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29755109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41417-018-0019-0
Descripción
Sumario:The purpose of this study was to determine if localized delivery of IL-12 encoded by a replication-incompetent adenoviral vector engineered to express IL-12 via a RheoSwitch Therapeutic System(®) (RTS(®)) gene switch (Ad-RTS-IL-12) administered intratumorally which is inducibly controlled by the oral activator veledimex is an effective approach for glioma therapy. Mice bearing 5–10-day-old intracranial GL-261 gliomas were intratumorally administered Ad-RTS-mIL-12 in which IL-12 protein expression is tightly controlled by the activator ligand, veledimex. Local tumor viral vector levels concomitant with veledimex levels, IL-12-mRNA expression, local and systemic cytokine expression, tumor and systemic flow cytometry and overall survival were studied. Ad-RTS-mIL-12+veledimex elicited a dose-related increase in tumor IL-12 mRNA and IL-12 protein and discontinuation of veledimex resulted in a return to baseline levels. These changes correlated with local immune and antitumor responses. Veledimex crossed the blood–brain barrier in both orthotopic GL-261 mice and cynomolgus monkeys. We have demonstrated that this therapy induced localized controlled production of IL-12 which correlates with an increase in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) leading to the desired biologic response of tumor growth inhibition and regression. At day 85 (study termination), 65% of the animals that received veledimex at 10 or 30 mg/m(2)/day were alive and tumor free. In contrast, the median survival for the other groups were: vehicle 23 days, bevacizumab 20 days, temozolomide 33 days and anti-PD-1 37 days. These findings suggest that the controlled intratumoral production of IL-12 induces local immune cell infiltration and improved survival in glioma, thereby demonstrating that this novel regulated immunotherapeutic approach may be an effective form of therapy for glioma.