Therapeutic advantage of combinatorial chimeric antigen receptor T cell and chemotherapies.

in Pharmacological reviews by Meghan B Ward, Amber B Jones, Giedre Krenciute

TLDR

  • Combination therapies of CAR T cells and chemotherapeutics may improve outcomes for patients with cancer by overcoming challenges faced by CAR T cell monotherapy.

Abstract

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies have transformed outcomes for many patients with hematological malignancies. However, some patients do not respond to CAR T cell treatment, and adapting CAR T cells for treatment of solid and brain tumors has been met with many challenges, including a hostile tumor microenvironment and poor CAR T cell persistence. Thus, it is unlikely that CAR T cell therapy alone will be sufficient for consistent, complete tumor clearance across patients with cancer. Combinatorial therapies of CAR T cells and chemotherapeutics are a promising approach for overcoming this because chemotherapeutics could augment CAR T cells for improved antitumor activity or work in tandem with CAR T cells to clear tumors. Herein, we review efforts toward achieving successful CAR T cell and chemical drug combination therapies. We focus on combination therapies with approved chemotherapeutics because these will be more easily translated to the clinic but also review nonapproved chemotherapeutics and drug screens designed to reveal promising new CAR T cell and chemical drug combinations. Overall, this review highlights the promise of CAR T cell and chemotherapy combinations with a specific focus on how combinatorial therapy overcomes challenges faced by either monotherapy and supports the potential of this therapeutic strategy to improve outcomes for patients with cancer. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Improving currently available CAR T cell products via combinatorial therapy with chemotherapeutics has the potential to drastically expand the types of cancers and number of patients that could benefit from these therapies when neither alone has been sufficient to achieve tumor clearance. Herein, we provide a thorough review of the current efforts toward studying CAR T and chemotherapy combinatorial therapies and offer perspectives on optimal ways to identify new and effective combinations moving forward.

Overview

  • The study reviews the challenges of adapting chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells for treatment of solid and brain tumors, and the potential of combination therapies with chemotherapeutics to improve outcomes.
  • The study focuses on combination therapies with approved chemotherapeutics, as well as non-approved chemotherapeutics and drug screens designed to reveal promising new CAR T cell and chemical drug combinations.
  • The primary objective of the study is to highlight the promise of CAR T cell and chemotherapy combinations and provide perspectives on optimal ways to identify new and effective combinations.

Comparative Analysis & Findings

  • The study highlights the importance of combinatorial therapy in overcoming challenges faced by CAR T cell monotherapy, such as poor persistence and antitumor activity.
  • Combinatorial therapies may improve antitumor activity and tumor clearance by augmenting CAR T cells or working in tandem with them.
  • The study reviews various combination therapies and drug screens, and offers perspectives on optimal ways to identify new and effective combinations moving forward.

Implications and Future Directions

  • The study suggests that combining CAR T cell therapy with chemotherapeutics has the potential to drastically expand the types of cancers and number of patients that could benefit from these therapies.
  • Future research directions include identifying and optimizing new CAR T cell and chemical drug combinations, as well as developing strategies to address challenges such as tumor heterogeneity and immune evasion.
  • The study highlights the need for further investigation into the optimal ways to identify new and effective combinations, as well as the development of strategies to address challenges faced by CAR T cell and chemotherapy combinations.