: The past decades witnessed the clinical employment of targeted therapies including but not limited to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) that restrain a broad variety of pro-tumorigenic signals. TKIs can be categorized into (i) agents that directly target cancer cells, (ii) normalize angiogenesis or (iii) affect cells of the hematologic lineage. However, a clear distinction of TKIs based on this definition is limited by the fact that many TKIs designed to inhibit cancer cells have also effects on immune cells that are being discovered. Additionally, TKIs originally designed to target hematological cancers exhibit bioactivities on healthy cells of the same hematological lineage. TKIs have been described to improve immune recognition and cancer immunosurveillance, providing the scientific basis to combine TKIs with immunotherapy. Indeed, combination of TKIs with immunotherapy showed synergistic effects in preclinical models and clinical trials and some combinations of TKIs normalizing angiogenesis with immune checkpoint blocking antibodies have already been approved by the FDA for cancer therapy. However, the identification of appropriate drug combinations as well as optimal dosing and scheduling needs to be improved in order to obtain tangible progress in cancer care. This Trial Watch summarizes active clinical trials combining TKIs with various immunotherapeutic strategies to treat cancer patients.

Trial Watch: combination of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and immunotherapy / Petrazzuolo, A.; Maiuri, M. C.; Zitvogel, L.; Kroemer, G.; Kepp, O.. - In: ONCOIMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 2162-402X. - 11:1(2022), p. 2077898. [10.1080/2162402X.2022.2077898]

Trial Watch: combination of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and immunotherapy

Maiuri M. C.;
2022

Abstract

: The past decades witnessed the clinical employment of targeted therapies including but not limited to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) that restrain a broad variety of pro-tumorigenic signals. TKIs can be categorized into (i) agents that directly target cancer cells, (ii) normalize angiogenesis or (iii) affect cells of the hematologic lineage. However, a clear distinction of TKIs based on this definition is limited by the fact that many TKIs designed to inhibit cancer cells have also effects on immune cells that are being discovered. Additionally, TKIs originally designed to target hematological cancers exhibit bioactivities on healthy cells of the same hematological lineage. TKIs have been described to improve immune recognition and cancer immunosurveillance, providing the scientific basis to combine TKIs with immunotherapy. Indeed, combination of TKIs with immunotherapy showed synergistic effects in preclinical models and clinical trials and some combinations of TKIs normalizing angiogenesis with immune checkpoint blocking antibodies have already been approved by the FDA for cancer therapy. However, the identification of appropriate drug combinations as well as optimal dosing and scheduling needs to be improved in order to obtain tangible progress in cancer care. This Trial Watch summarizes active clinical trials combining TKIs with various immunotherapeutic strategies to treat cancer patients.
2022
Trial Watch: combination of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and immunotherapy / Petrazzuolo, A.; Maiuri, M. C.; Zitvogel, L.; Kroemer, G.; Kepp, O.. - In: ONCOIMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 2162-402X. - 11:1(2022), p. 2077898. [10.1080/2162402X.2022.2077898]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/939775
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