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abstract
Opinion statement
The immune system
plays an active role in the pathogenesis of ovarian cancer (OC), as well
as in the mechanisms of disease progression and overall survival (OS).
Immunotherapy in gynecological cancers could help to revert
immunosuppression and lymphocyte depletion due to prior treatments.
Current immunotherapies for ovarian cancer, like all cancer
immunotherapy, are based on either stimulating the immune system or
reverting immune suppression. Several approaches have been used,
including therapeutic vaccines, monoclonal antibodies; checkpoint
inhibitors and adoptive T cell transfer. Most of these therapies are
still in early-phase testing (phase I and II) for ovarian cancer, but
the initial data in ovarian cancer and successful use in other types of
cancers suggests some of these approaches may ultimately prove useful
for ovarian cancer as well. Ovarian cancer vaccines have shown only a
modest benefit in ovarian cancer when used as monotherapy, but these
agents may be able to enhance antitumor activity when combined with
chemotherapy, checkpoint inhibitors, or other immunotherapies.
Monoclonal antibodies have been explored in ovarian cancer but despite
encouraging phase II data, randomized studies failed to demonstrate
significant clinical benefit. Check point inhibitors have promising
activity in several solid tumors and have demonstrated a favorable
toxicity profile. Data from early clinical trials utilizing PD1 and
PD-L1 inhibitors showed encouraging results. Ongoing clinical trials are
evaluating the role of check point inhibitors in combination with
chemotherapy. Adoptive T cell transfer involves the infusion of ex vivo
activated and expanded tumor specific T cells, using various sources and
types of T cells. While this approach has been explored in several
hematologic malignancies, it constitutes early research in ovarian
cancer. Immunotherapy remains investigational in ovarian cancer and the
benefit of this approach in improving progression-free survival (PFS) or
OS is unknown. Previous clinical trials have not selected patients
based on biomarkers and this may explain the negative results. We expect
to discover that tumor response will relate to the patient’s immune
features and specific tumor characteristics. We are only beginning to
realize the potential of immunotherapy for ovarian cancer patients, and
one goal of future clinical trials will be to identify subsets of
patient based on histologic, molecular, and immune characteristics.
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