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OVERCOMING RESISTANCE

In the face of bacterial threats that can evade modern medicines,
researchers are trying every trick in the book to develop new, effective antibiotics.

BY THE SCIENTIST STAFF
Although researchers and drug developers have been
sounding warnings for years about bacteria out-evolving
medicine’s arsenal of antibiotics, the crisis is coming
to a head. In the United States alone, some 23,000 people
are killed each year by infections caused by drug-resistant bacteria,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s
2013 Threat Report. Many more patients die of other
conditions complicated by infection with resistant pathogens.
Such maladies cost the health-care system more than $20 billion
annually, in part because patients suffering from drugresistant
infections require more than 8 million additional
hospital days.
The statistics are sobering, and they’re made even more so by
the fact that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has
only approved two new classes of antibiotics since 1998. In fact,
only five new classes have hit the market in the last 45 years; the
vast majority of today’s antibiotics were developed before 1968.
Overuse—and not just in people, but in animals, too—is a primary
driver of the antibiotic-resistance epidemic. One of the most
controversial antibiotics practices has been the “nontherapeutic”
treatment of farm animals with low doses of the drugs to promote
growth and prevent disease in crowded factory-farm conditions.
(See “Antibiotics in Animals We Eat,” The Scientist, April 2012.)
Up to 80 percent of the antibiotics used in the U.S. is fed to animals,
and the Natural Resources Defense Council recently criticized
the FDA for allowing livestock producers to include 30 different
antibiotics in the animals’ feed and water, 18 of which the
agency itself had rated as “high risk” for introducing antibioticresistant
bacteria into the human food supply.
While debates rage over what is driving the recent onslaught
of antibiotic-resistant pathogens and how to best stem the bacterial
tide, many researchers are now focused on developing new
treatment regimens to combat these deadly superbugs. One thing
most of these scientists on the front lines can agree on is that
antibiotic resistance is not a single-solution problem. Here, The
Scientist surveys four strategies being explored to overcome even
the most resistant bacteria: tweaking old compounds into entirely
new classes of antibiotics; combining modern antibiotics in a onetwo
punch against infection; supplementing existing antibiotics
with adjuvants that can render resistant pathogens susceptible
once more; and reviving the field’s roots by combing the globe for
novel antimicrobial compounds.

BLASTS FROM THE PAST
The golden era of antibiotic discovery is well behind us. In the
mid-20th century, numerous new classes of antibiotics came on
the market, and scientists tinkered with these molecules to create
ever more powerful versions of the drugs. Since then, however, the
well has dried up. Even genomics has failed to rescue the stalled
antibiotics field, says Anthony Coates, an antibiotic researcher at
St. George’s, University of London, and the founder of Helperby
Therapeutics.
One approach researchers are undertaking to break the dry
spell is to alter old drugs, including those that have been abandoned
by Big Pharma, using new techniques. Richard Lee at St.
Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, for
example, is studying an old antibiotic called spectinomycin that
was introduced in the 1960s to treat gonorrhea. While the drug
worked against the sexually transmitted bacterium, large doses
were required, and, eventually, drug makers developed more
potent antibiotics. Although spectinomycin only has weak effects
against most microbes, Lee saw potential in remodeling it to treat
certain bacterial infections, thanks to its ability to bind the bacterial
ribosome and clog protein synthesis.
“What we could take advantage of, which wasn’t available 20
years ago, is the crystal structure of spectinomycin bound to the
ribosome,” Lee says. With a tweak to adjust how the molecule
binds to the ribosome, the modified drug was able to fight off
tuberculosis in vitro and in mice (Nat Med, 20:152-58, 2014).
The changes not only maintained the affinity of the drug for the
ribosome, but allowed the antibiotic to avoid the efflux pump
that normally ejects this drug from the tuberculosis bacterium.
“It works better than we would have dreamed,” Lee says, although
its potency against gonorrhea was not improved.
Jason Sello, a biochemist at Brown University, has also found
that slight chemical tweaks can make a profound difference to
antibacterial activity. His group has been tinkering with the structure
of ring-shape compounds called acyldepsipeptides (ADEPs).
Discovered in the 1980s, ADEPs were initially of interest to pharmaceutical
companies because of their antibacterial activity, but
were ultimately set aside in pursuit of other endeavors and never
brought to market. One unfavorable aspect of ADEPs is that bacteria
tended to become resistant to them quite quickly, rendering
the drugs incapable of clearing an infection. But because ADEPs
work in a way that no other antibiotic does—they activate widespread
protein degradation by the bacterial enzyme ClpP, which
normally clears misfolded proteins—they’re extremely appealing
for development as a drug to fight bacterial infections, says Sello.
He and his colleagues have focused on the rigidity of the cyclic
structure of ADEPs and found that strengthening the hydrogen
bonds of the ring can increase the antibacterial power of the compound,
seemingly by allowing the drug easier entry into target
cells (J Am Chem Soc, 136:1922-29, 2014). “Why it’s better at killing
bacteria is not because it has a better mechanism of action, but
we think it’s more cell-permeable,” says Sello. Preliminary studies
in mouse models show that the modified ADEP is good at treating
staph and Enterococcus infections, and so far, there’s no evidence
that the drug is toxic.
At Oregon State University, microbiologist Bruce Geller has
picked up on yet another discovery that was made decades ago.
Phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMOs) are short,
synthetic versions of genetic material that were invented in the
1980s. Their molecular backbone makes them resistant to nucleases,
so they can sneak past bacteria’s defenses against foreign
DNA, and the sequence of each PMO is custom-designed to
interfere with mRNA expression by a particular gene. Geller’s
group bonded the PMOs to membrane-penetrating peptides to
enhance entry into bacteria. The resultant peptide-conjugated
PMOs (PPMOs) are “the ultimate narrow-spectrum therapeutic,
because they’re species- and gene-specific,” Geller says.
Geller has designed PPMOs to target a variety of bacterial
genes, including acpP, a gene required for lipid biosynthesis. “If
you knock it out, it’s a lethal event,” he says. Sure enough, when
treated with acpP-specific PPMOs, mice infected with multidrug-
resistant Acinetobacter baumannii survived for at least
one week, while control mice died, most within a day (J Infectious
Diseases, 208:1553-60, 2013).
Geller and the other researchers hope their work will one
day bear fruit in the clinic, but for now, such new drugs emerging
from old discoveries remain merely a preclinical glimmer
of hope, with many years of work ahead before medicine gets a
desperately needed novel class of antimicrobials. “The scientific
difficulty [of developing a new antibiotic] is not to be underestimated,”
says Coates. —Kerry Grens

IT TAKES TWO
Given the difficulties in bringing an entirely new class of antimicrobials
to market, some researchers are setting their sights on
what they see as a more readily attainable goal: to combine existing
drugs into more effective therapies. “Finding a brand-new
chemical scaffold that has all the wonderful chemical properties
of the [antibiotics] we have now is going to be extremely hard to
do,” says McMaster University chemical biologist Gerard Wright.
“All future antibiotics should be developed as combinations.”
To explore the potential of new combination therapies, microbiologist
Kim Lewis, director of the Antimicrobial Discovery Center
at Northeastern University in Boston, looked to one of the
seemingly failed ADEP antibiotic compounds, ADEP4. Bayer
Healthcare scientists discovered the drug in 2005 but later
dropped it after in vitro experiments showed that bacteria rapidly
developed resistance to it. But, like Sello, Lewis and his colleagues
thought that it just needed a little help. So they combined
ADEP4 with a conventional antibiotic, rifampicin, in the hopes
that the treatment would be effective—and stay effective—against
Staphylococcus aureus, which readily forms antibiotic-resistant
biofilms harboring dormant cells known as persisters. (See “Bacterial
Persisters,” The Scientist, January 2014.)
The therapy worked better than anyone had dared to hope:
while ADEP4 and rifampicin each reduced microbial populations
in vitro and in mice, administered together they obliterated the
bacteria (Nature, 503:365-70, 2013). “What we discovered unexpectedly
was that with the combination of this ADEP compound
with another antibiotic we got complete sterilization,” Lewis says.
Lewis and his colleagues don’t yet know the precise mechanism
of vulnerability that the ADEP4/rifampicin combination
exploited, but it likely involved ADEP4’s activation of the ClpP
protease. Triggering ClpP to degrade proteins nonspecifically in
persister cells within biofilms may have caused the breakdown of
hundreds of proteins, forcing the cells to self-digest, Lewis says.
While some bacteria could have evolved to lack functional ClpP
and therefore resist ADEP4’s strike, rifampicin, which inhibits
RNA polymerase, likely stepped in and killed those cells. “We have
to do some additional toxicity testing, but the goal is to move this
into clinical studies,” Lewis says.
Yanmin Hu, a medical microbiologist at St. George’s, University
of London, and director of research at Helperby Therapeutics,
also had recent success with a combination antibiotic therapy.
Hu and Helperby founder Coates used high-throughput screening
to identify HT61, a small antibiotic compound that exhibited
selective bactericidal activity against methicillin-susceptible S.
aureus (MSSA) and methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) by
depolarizing the bacterial cell membranes. “We thought, ‘OK, if
we combine our compound with existing antibiotics, let’s see what
we can get,’” Hu recalls. The result in vitro and in mouse models:
HT61 enhances the antimicrobial activities of traditional antibiotics,
especially aminoglycosides such as neomycin, gentamicin,
and chlorhexidine, against MSSA and MRSA (J Antimicrobial
Chemother, 68:374-84, 2012).
Hu says that the combination therapy likely worked so well—
far better than either antibiotic administered alone—because
HT61 was essentially punching holes in the membranes of nondividing
bacterial cells, allowing the aminoglycosides to flood in.
Used as a topical agent in combination with the antibiotic mupirocin,
HT61 has cleared Phase 1 and 2 trials for the treatment of
latent MRSA infections, Hu says. She and Coates have also identified
a plethora of other potential compounds that might serve
to enhance the effects of existing antibiotics. “We have about 300
similar compounds that show very good activity against persistent
organisms,” Hu says.
Antibiotics can also be combined with existing, nonantibiotic
drugs, as Wright is doing. In 2011, he and his colleagues
screened more than 1,000 approved drugs for compounds that
augmented the ability of the antibiotic minocycline to fight
infection. They identified a suite of promising nonantibiotic
drugs—for indications as diverse as Parkinson’s disease, irritable
bowel syndrome, cancer, and diarrhea—which, in combination
with minocycline, were able to fight infections of Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, E. coli, and S. aureus in vitro and in mice (Nat
Chem Biol, 7:348-50, 2011). “We’ve really missed a whole section
of antimicrobial target space,” says Wright, who adds that
he feels strongly that combination therapies are the best way to
tackle the antibiotic resistance threat. “The idea of a magic bullet
is gone. We need a magic shotgun.” —Bob Grant
The idea of a magic bullet is gone. We need
a magic shotgun.
—Gerard Wright, McMaster University

RESENSITIZING
BACTERIA
Rather than combining antibiotics with new compounds found
to have antibiotic activity, some researchers are looking to simply
add adjuvant compounds. Although adjuvants themselves are
unable to kill bacteria, when added to antibiotic regimens they
render resistant microbes susceptible once again.
“We are developing agents to sensitize bacteria to the agents
we already have,” says microbiologist Anders Hakansson of the
State University of New York at Buffalo, who in 2012 found that
treatment with a protein-lipid complex from human milk could
potentiate the effect of common antibiotics against drug-resistant
Streptococcus pneumoniae (PLOS ONE, 7:e43514, 2012).
From a financial standpoint, antibiotic adjuvants make sense.
Developing and validating a small-molecule sensitizer to be used
in conjunction with an existing antibiotic should cost far less than
developing and validating a completely new drug. The aim is “to
extend the utility and lifetime of existing antibiotics,” says biomedical
engineer James Collins of Boston University. “There is
still some activity, in some cases, of the antibiotic, it just doesn’t
get to the lethality threshold. The adjuvant allows one to shift
that threshold.”
One way microbes are evolving resistance to first-line antibiotics
is by blocking entry of the drug into the cell. Many gramnegative
bacteria pose the additional challenge of producing
􀁠-lactamase enzymes that block antibiotics containing a 􀁠-lactam
ring, such as penicillins, cephamycins, and some carbapenems,
from inhibiting bacterial cell-wall biosynthesis. And even if an
antibiotic is able to penetrate the bacterial cell wall and avoid
degradation by 􀁠-lactamases in the cytoplasm, the drug must
also fight against efflux pumps to stay inside the bacterium long
enough to kill the cell.
It’s a tall order, says Laura Piddock, a professor of microbiology
at the University of Birmingham, who leads the Antimicrobials
Research Group there. “These molecules have to not only get
through the outer [bacterial cell] membrane, they then have to
get past all these enzymes, and then they’re almost certainly going
to be pumped out,” she says. “These three things together make a
very, very tough challenge.”
But new adjuvant sensitizers can target any one of these bacterial
defenses—by damaging cell walls, inhibiting 􀁠-lactamase,
or stopping efflux pumps—and a handful of biotech companies
now have antibiotic adjuvants in their discovery and development
pipelines. For example, the Boston-based firm Collins
cofounded, EnBiotix, is working on potentiators such as silver
compounds that sensitize persistent bacteria to existing antibiotics
by increasing bacterial membrane permeability. Oklahoma
City-based Synereca is working to validate inhibitors of
the bacterial protein RecA, which plays a role in recombinational
DNA repair. And Venus Remedies in Chandigarh, India,
secured approval in a handful of countries last year to sell
Elores, a 􀁠-lactamase inhibitor combined with the antibiotic
adjuvant disodium edetate.
By and large, however, progress has been slow, limited in part
by the toxicity of these small molecules. “People are starting to
look [for antibiotic adjuvants],” says Hakansson, “but right now,
there’s not really a critical mass of molecules that really work”
without causing unacceptable side effects.
Nevertheless, he and others continue to search for new adjuvants
that could render increasingly useless antibiotics effective
once again. “Different drugs synergize with each other,” says
Hakansson, who envisions a future in which antibiotic-resistant
bacterial infections are treated much like HIV, with a cocktail of
drugs. Once identified and validated, adjuvant sensitizers could
be as common to pharmacy shelves as the antibiotics themselves.
—Tracy Vence

DISCOVERY ZONE
Since Alexander Fleming’s serendipitous 1928 observation that a
Penicillium fungus prevented growth of staphylococci bacteria,
the search for new antibiotics has largely been focused on fungi
and microbes living in the soil, in the hopes of discovering another
natural product with the broad effectiveness and low toxicity of
penicillin. But as more recent searches result in disappointment,
some investigators are turning to new sources—plants, insects,
and marine organisms—to find antibiotics that can kill our most
common and persistent pathogens.
When chemist Simon Gibbons of the University College London
School of Pharmacy went in search of plants harboring compounds
with antimicrobial properties in 2008, he paid particular
attention to those that have been used in traditional medicine—
especially for wound healing. “If a plant is used as a wound-healing
agent, it’s quite likely that it contains chemicals that kill the bacteria
in the wound,” he says. Although best known for its psychoactive
properties, cannabis, historically ingested in parts of Afghanistan
and India to treat infection, fit the bill. Gibbons and his colleagues
isolated five cannabinoids from Cannabis sativa and found that
each one was effective against MRSA (J Nat Prod, 71:1427-30,
2008). “It hasn’t been confirmed in vivo, but certainly in the lab,
we know that these things kill drug-resistant bacteria,” he says.
Gibbons has also found chemicals with antibiotic properties
in other familiar plant groups. For instance, plants in the Allium
genus, which includes garlic and onions, produce sulfur-containing
compounds that have activity against MRSA and Mycobacterium
(J Nat Prod, 72:360-65, 2009). And many of the hyperihypericums—
the family that includes St. John’s wort—make chemicals
called acylphloroglucinols that also effectively kill MRSA in vitro
(J Nat Prod, 75:336-43, 2012). “We’ve had leads . . . and a series of
compounds, which have been patented,” says Gibbons, and those
compounds are now being synthesized and modified to improve
their activity.
Andreas Vilcinskas of Justus Liebig University Giessen in Germany
is using another vast resource to identify novel antibacterial
compounds: insects. “Insects are considered the most successful
group of organisms in the world,” says Vilcinskas, who suspects
that one of the keys to their success is the ability to manage
microbes. And it’s likely, he adds, that different insects have different
strategies for protecting themselves against pathogens. “I’m
convinced that the biodiversity that you see at the species level is
also reflected at the molecular level.”
In 2012, he decided to home in on invasive insect species,
which he hypothesizes have a particularly strong immune system
to allow them to succeed in new environments. Harvesting
hemolymph from harlequin ladybird beetles (Harmonia axyridis),
which have successfully outcompeted native beetles the
world over, Vilcinskas discovered more than 50 novel antimicrobial
compounds. One compound, called harmonine, demonstrated
activity against both Mycobacterium tuberculosis and
MRSA (Biology Letters, 8:308-11, 2012), and Vilcinskas’s group
is now making chemical modifications to harmonine and other
compounds to produce even more potent antibiotics.
Other researchers, such as William Fenical of the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, California, have
moved the quest for antibiotics away from terrestrial environments
entirely. From offshore shallows to depths of nearly 6,000
meters (more than 19,000 feet), Fenical and his colleagues collect
ocean-floor samples, then culture the microorganisms contained
within and test the compounds they produce against antibiotic-
resistant microbes such as MRSA. “Seventy percent of the
Earth is the ocean,” Fenical says. “We feel the ocean has enormous
potential.”
Last year, the group detailed its discovery of a unique antibiotic
made by a species of Streptomyces bacteria isolated from
marine sediments off the coast of Santa Barbara. They named
the compound anthracimycin because of its high activity against
the potential bioterrorism agent Bacillus anthracis, but the compound
also demonstrated inhibition of MRSA in nutrient broth
assays (Angew Chem Int Ed, 52:7822-24, 2013).
Moving from the lab to the clinic is not trivial, however, Fenical
notes. Improving the compound’s solubility and activity, lowering
its toxicity, and scaling up its production can all present challenges.
And in such early stages, the impact of these discoveries
on the problem of antibiotic resistance remains to be seen. “To be
completely honest, the jury’s out,” says McMaster’s Wright, whose
group has explored compounds made by microbes found in an isolated
Mexican cave and in a Cuban mangrove forest. Nevertheless,
given the diversity of natural products now being discovered, he
adds, “it’s certainly worthwhile exploring.” —Abby Olena


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Deploying the Body’s Army

Using patients’ own immune systems to fight cancer
BY JAMIE GREEN AND CHARLOTTE ARIYAN

More than a century ago, American bone surgeon William
Coley came across the case of Fred Stein, whose
aggressive cheek sarcoma had disappeared after he
suffered a Streptococcus pyogenes infection following surgery to
remove part of the large tumor. Seven years later, Coley tracked
Stein down and found him alive, with no evidence of cancer.
Amazed, Coley speculated that the immune response to the bacterial
infection had played an integral role in fighting the disease,
and the doctor went on to inoculate more than 10 other patients
suffering from inoperable tumors with Streptococcus bacteria.
Sure enough, several of those who survived the infection—and
one who did not—experienced tumor reduction.1
Coley subsequently developed and tested the effect of injecting
dead bacteria into tumors, hoping to stimulate an immune
response without risking fatal infection, and found that he was
able to cause complete regression of cancer in some patients with
sarcoma, a type of malignant tumor often arising from bone, muscle,
or fat. Unfortunately, with the increasing use of radiation
treatments and the advent of systemic chemotherapy, much of
Coley’s work was abandoned by the time he died in 1936.
Today, however, the use of immune modulation to treat cancer
is finally receiving its due. Unlike chemotherapy and radiation
treatments, which directly attack cancer cells, immunotherapy
agents augment the body’s normal immune machinery,
increasing its ability to fight tumors. This strategy involves either
introducing compounds that directly stimulate the immune cells
to work harder, or introducing synthetic proteins that mimic
the components of the normal immune response, thereby
increasing the body’s entire immune reaction. Last year, cancer
immunotherapy was named “Breakthrough of the Year” by
the journal Science, placing it in the company of the first cloned
mammal and the complete sequencing of the human genome.
With a handful of therapies already on the market, and dozens
more showing promise in all stages of clinical development,
these treatments are poised to forever change the way that we
approach cancer management.
The power of the immune response
The human immune system orchestrates processes that continuously
survey the host environment and protect it from infection.
The two main components of the human immune system, the
innate and adaptive arms, work together to fight infection and,
importantly, to remember which pathogens the host has encountered
in the past. Alerted by danger signals in the form of common
microbial peptides, surface molecules, or gene sequences,
innate immune cells such as macrophages and neutrophils
invoke broad mechanisms to quickly fight foreign invaders. At
the same time, B cells of the adaptive immune system generate
a highly specific response, creating antibodies that can recognize
and clear the pathogens. Antigen-specific T cells, activated
by innate immune cells that have ingested the pathogen, further
boost the body’s response. These B and T cells have lasting memory,
allowing them to generate faster and stronger responses on
subsequent exposures.

USING THE IMMUNE SYSTEM TO BATTLE CANCER
Researchers are now developing tumor-specific vaccines that present the body’s own immune cells with tumor-associated antigens in order
to elicit an immune response that specifically targets cancerous cells. There is currently one such vaccine on the market—Sipuleucel-T (below,
left), which is made by Seattle-based cancer research company Dendreon and was approved in 2010 as a last-resort treatment for metastatic
prostate cancer. Similar treatments for some other cancers are now in late-stage clinical trials.
Other strategies aim to maintain T cells in an active state so they can continue the fight against cancer. One approach is to block the
inhibitory pathways known as immune checkpoints that halt the immune response using drugs that block these inhibitory signals (box, right).
The FDA approved the humanized monoclonal antibody ipilimumab (marketed by Bristol-Myers
Squibb as Yervoy) for the treatment of advanced melanoma in 2011, and researchers are now
testing the drug in patients with other cancers, as well as developing similar immune checkpoint
blockade therapies.
A third immunotherapy currently under development is known as adoptive T-cell transfer.
This treatment involves isolating T cells from a patient; expanding them in the lab, where they
can be trained to more effectively target the cancer; then reinfusing them
into the body. To increase the efficacy of the method, researchers
are genetically engineering patients’ T cells to express receptors
specific for the tumor.

VACCINATING CANCER
Most cancer vaccines in development involve an
injection containing a component of a tumor-specific
antigen, with the goal of increasing the immune system’s
tumor-specific activity. Others, such as Sipuleucel-T,
involve the extraction of a patient’s antigen-presenting
cells (APCs), which are cultured with antigens from the
patient’s tumor along with immune-stimulating factors
to prime the APCs to activate T cells in the body.

DON’T STOP FIGHTING
Immune checkpoint blockade therapies work by preventing the
immune response from turning off when it normally would. By
blocking these immune checkpoints using molecules that bind T-cell
surface proteins such as cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-
4) or programmed death-1 receptor (PD-1), which are expressed on
activated T-cells and normally dampen the immune response, the
treatments are able to maintain an active immune attack.

In the 1960s and ’70s, Lloyd Old of the Ludwig Institute for
Cancer Research at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
(MSKCC) helped rekindle interest in cancer immunotherapy
research, finding, among other things, that tumor cells display
different surface antigens than healthy cells. These socalled
tumor-associated antigens serve as the basis for developing
cancer treatment vaccines, which attempt to stimulate
a tumor-specific immune response. Old’s discoveries were followed
in the 1980s by the work of Steven Rosenberg at the
National Institutes of Health. Rosenberg studied the use of
cytokines, which normally act to stimulate the immune system,
to treat cancer.
More recently, the advent of immune checkpoint blockade
approaches pioneered by James Allison, formerly of MSKCC and
current chair of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer
Center, has written immunotherapy into the oncologist’s playbook.
To ensure that the immune system does not become overactive,
causing tissue damage or attacking the body, regulatory
T cells (or Tregs) and myeloid-derived suppressor cells secrete
anti-inflammatory proteins or directly inhibit pro-inflammatory
immune cells. Additionally, immune checkpoint proteins
expressed on the surface of activated immune cells serve
to neutralize the immune response. Tumors may in fact exploit
these very anti-inflammatory pathways, perhaps by stimulating
an increase in Tregs or increased immune-checkpoint protein
expression, to evade recognition by the immune system. Allison
is now pioneering techniques to block these checkpoints, allowing
the immune response to continue to fight the tumor unhindered.
(See illustration at left.)
These exciting new therapies are able to prolong life in
patients whose cancers were previously deemed fatal, with kidney
cancer and malignant melanoma leading the pack.
Vaccinating to treat cancer
Localized injection of Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), an antituberculosis
vaccine made from attenuated live Mycobacterium
bovis, was approved for the treatment of bladder cancer in 1990.
It was the first immunotherapy approved by the US Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of cancer. The idea
that tuberculosis or BCG infection could have a role in fighting
cancer was first posited in 1929 by Johns Hopkins biogerontologist
Raymond Pearl, who noted a reduced incidence of cancer
among patients with active tuberculosis at the time of autopsy.2
Old went on to demonstrate in the late 1950s that BCG injections
in animal models could reduce tumor growth. Subsequent clinical
work in the 1970s and ’80s found that the treatment caused
regression of bladder cancers in patients given regular intralesional
BCG injections and a 12-fold reduction in bladder tumor
recurrence, along with decreased progression and improved survival.
Twenty years after its approval, BCG remains the most effective
therapy available for the treatment of non-muscle invasive
bladder cancer, resulting in the eradication of cancer in 70 percent
of eligible patients.

The attenuated bacteria decrease tumor growth by attaching
to the bladder tumor and surrounding cells and provoking the
infiltration of immune cells, proinflammatory cytokine release,
and eventual phagocytosis of cancerous cells by neutrophils and
macrophages. While this inflammatory response is efficient at
killing tumor tissue, it can also damage the healthy cells of the
bladder lining, resulting in side effects that mimic a urinary tract
infection, including low-grade fever and pain during urination.2
Researchers are now hoping to avoid the side effects of localized
injections by designing novel vaccines that trigger systemic
tumor-specific immune responses by binding to proteins unique
to tumor cells.
Unfortunately, tumor-specific vaccines have rarely demonstrated
significant antitumor activity and survival benefits in
humans. So far, only one vaccine of this type is on the market,
Seattle-based cancer research company Dendreon’s Sipuleucel-
T (or Provenge), approved by the FDA in 2010 as a last-resort
treatment for metastatic prostate cancer. In this case, vaccine production
involves extracting a patient’s own antigen-presenting
cells (APCs), a subset of white blood cells capable of activating T
cells, and reinfusing them several days later. While outside of the
body, the APCs are incubated with immune-stimulating factors
and prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) antigen, a cell-surface protein
found on 95 percent of prostate cancer cells. The APCs then
reenter circulation armed to elicit an immune response against
the prostate tumor. (See illustration on page 36.) In randomized
controlled trials, the treatment caused a four-month improvement
in overall survival for eligible prostate cancer patients.3
Systemic injections of the PAP antigen and similar antigens
that target other types of cancer—as opposed to treatment of
white blood cells ex vivo as in Sipuleucel-T—have been shown to
elicit an immune response in the tumors. But they have not yet
been proven to increase survival times. Hundreds of vaccine clinical
trials of all stages, including Phase 3 trials for breast cancer,
lung cancer, kidney cancer, and melanoma, are now underway to
evaluate whether these therapies can indeed boost the cancerspecific
immune response and help patients.
Blocking immune inhibition
Another exciting and rapidly expanding category of immunotherapy
is immune checkpoint blockade. Immune checkpoints
are inhibitory pathways that help prevent overstimulation of the
immune system. Proteins on the surface of activated immune cells
turn off those cells when an immune battle is perceived to be over.
The cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4), for example, is
normally located inside T cells, but when expressed on the surface,
it functions as a “brake” signal to the immune system.
In the mid-1990s, Allison hypothesized that temporary interruption
of CTLA-4’s inhibitory effects could augment the immune
system and fight tumors. In preclinical models, he demonstrated
that treatment with an anti–CTLA-4 antibody was able to cure
mice of colon tumors, which can be made to form on the surface
of the body by injecting transplantable mouse colon cancer cells
subcutaneously.4 Early clinical studies in patients with malignant
melanoma demonstrated the treatment’s safety and hinted
at its efficacy. In 2010, a large Phase 3 trial showed that blocking
CTLA-4 with a humanized monoclonal antibody called ipilimumab
(or Yervoy, as marketed by Bristol-Myers Squibb) improved
overall survival in patients with late-stage melanoma.5
While the response rate was low, with only about 10 percent of
patients showing decreased tumor size after therapy and 18 percent
showing stable disease, ipilimumab was the first agent that
improved survival in these patients, who typically live only six
to nine months from diagnosis when treated with conventional
chemotherapy agents. Moreover, the majority of patients who
did respond to ipilimumab showed improvement lasting more
than two years. The FDA approved the drug for the treatment of
advanced melanoma in 2011, and follow-up studies of early trial
participants are showing that some patients live up to 10 years
after their initial ipilimumab treatment.6 Phase 2 and 3 trials are
now testing ipilimumab treatment for numerous other types of
cancer, including non–small cell lung cancer, prostate cancer, kidney
cancer, and ovarian cancer.
The most common adverse events associated with ipilimumab
treatment are immune-related and result from the drug’s
unleashing of the immune system. They include colitis, dermatitis,
and hepatitis, which all result from excessive inflammation.
Given ipilimumab’s low response rate, further work is needed to
improve this therapy.
One option may be to block other immune checkpoints, such
as the interaction between the programmed cell death 1 receptor
(PD-1) on T cells and its ligand (PD-L1) on APCs. Similar
to CTLA-4, PD-1 is expressed on activated T cells, as well as on
“exhausted” T cells that have been shut off despite the persistence
of pathogens. When PD-1 binds to PD-L1, the T-cell response
is attenuated. Interestingly, in addition to expression on APCs,
PD-L1 has also been found on tumor cells, and it is thought to
play a role in how tumors are able to evade the immune response.
Early results have been promising for Bristol-Myers Squibb’s
nivolumab, an anti-PD-1 antibody, in the treatment of malignant
melanoma, non–small cell lung cancer, and kidney cancer, and
Phase 3 trials are currently under way to investigate the potential
survival benefit of this novel agent.7 Similar studies are also being
conducted for PD-L1 inhibitors.
Early research testing the combination of anti–CTLA-4 and
anti–PD-1 medications also point to the benefits of blocking both
immune checkpoints simultaneously. In a study published by one
of us (Ariyan) in the New England Journal of Medicine last July,
more than half of metastatic melanoma patients treated with the
maximum combination dose of nivolumab and ipilimumab had
a greater than 80 percent reduction in tumor mass, and more
than 80 percent of these patients were alive a year after treatment.
8 These promising results for a disease with so few treatment
options show why immune checkpoint blockade is altering
the landscape of cancer therapy.
Transferring T cells
A third way to boost the immune attack on a tumor is to isolate T
cells from a patient, expand them in the laboratory, then reinfuse
them into the body as souped-up cancer-fighting agents. Known
as adoptive T-cell transfer, the procedure was initially performed
using tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL), a subset of white
blood cells that have left the circulating blood and migrated into
solid tumors, and which can be isolated from excised tumors. (See
“Imagining a Cure,” The Scientist, April 2011.) Unfortunately, disease
progression in some patients is too quick to allow the time
needed for the extensive ex vivo work, which can take up to a
month; but for those who can wait, the therapy may be of some
help. In a Phase 2 trial published in 2010, half of 20 patients with
stage IV melanoma showed noticeable improvement following
treatment, including two complete remissions.9
This strategy is limited, however, in that some patients do not
have a lesion that can be excised, or the excised tumor does not
have any TILs that grow or that demonstrate antitumor reactivity
in vitro. To circumvent these hurdles, researchers have developed
chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) as a method of genetically
modifying a patient’s circulating T cells to make them target
tumor cells. CARs include an antigen-recognition domain, or
modified antibody segment, which is able to recognize a specific
protein on the surface of tumor cells, and an intracellular domain
that activates the T cell and stimulates in vivo proliferation.10
Researchers have designed CARs to treat a variety of cancers,
including chronic lymphoid leukemia (CLL). In one case, they isolated
T cells from a CLL patient’s blood and engineered them to
express a CD19-targeting CAR. CD19 is a protein that is expressed
on the surface of normal B cells, as well as on malignant B cells.
After expanding the modified B cells in vitro, researchers reinfused
them into the patient, who had failed to respond to all previously
available treatment regimens. Following treatment, this
patient, and now numerous others, was found to be cancer free.11
(See “Commander of an Immune Flotilla” on page 56.)
While there are currently no FDA-approved therapies involving
such T-cell manipulations, numerous Phase 1 and 2 trials are
underway to determine safety profiles on a larger scale as well as
effects on survival for a variety of different cancer types, including
leukemia, lymphoma, pancreatic cancer, breast cancer, prostate
cancer, and melanoma.
The future of immunotherapy
Immunotherapy is quickly proving itself as a powerful weapon in
the fight against cancer, and research continues to further improve
the effectiveness of this approach and to broaden the number of
patients that are able to benefit from it. Many researchers are currently
studying the effects of combining multiple immunotherapy
methods, such as immune checkpoint blockade and adoptive
T-cell transfer, or cancer treatment vaccines and cytokine administration.
In the coming years, it will be exciting to see the profound
effects that immunotherapy agents are expected to have on
human survival as the hundreds of clinical trials currently interrogating
this breakthrough begin to bear fruit. 􀁊
Jamie Green is a general surgery resident at New York Presbyterian
Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical College and is currently
completing a Surgery Research Fellowship at Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center, where Charlotte Ariyan is an assistant
attending who is conducting clinical trials on ipilimumab.
References
1. S.A. Cann et al., “Dr William Coley and tumour regression: a place in history
or in the future,” Postrgrad Med J, 79:672-80, 2003.
2. N.M. Gandhi et al., “Bacillus Calmette-Guerin immunotherapy for
genitourinary cancer,” BJU Int, 112:288-97, 2013.
3. P.W. Kantoff et al., “Sipuleucel-T immunotherapy for castration-resistant
prostate cancer,” N Engl J Med, 363:411-22, 2010.
4. D.R. Leach et al., “Enhancement of antitumor immunity by CTLA-4 blockade,”
Science, 271:1734-36, 1996.
5. F.S. Hodi et al., “Improved survival with ipilimumab
in patients with metastatic melanoma,” N Engl J Med,
363:711-23, 2010.
6. Z. Chustecka, “Some melanoma patients living for
up to 10 years after ipilimumab,” Medscape Medical
News, Sept 2013.
7. S.L. Topalian et al., “Safety, activity and immune
correlates of anti–PD-1 antibody in cancer, ” N Engl J
Med, 366:2443-54, 2012.
8. J.D. Wolchok et al., “Nivolumab plus ipilimumab in
advanced melanoma, ” N Engl J Med, 369:122-33,
2013.
9. M. Besser et al., “Clinical responses in a phase II
study using adoptive
transfer of shortterm
cultured tumor
infiltration lymphocytes
in metastatic melanoma
patients,” Clin Cancer
Res, 16:2646-55, 2010.
10. N.P. Restifo et
al., “Adoptive
immunotherapy for
cancer: harnessing the
T cell response,” Nat
Rev Immunol, 12:269-
81, 2012.
11. D.L. Porter et al.,
“Chimeric antigen
receptor–modified
T cells in chronic
lymphoid leukemia,” N
Engl J Med 365:725-33,
2011.


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