Eric P Grewal, Brian V Nahed, Bob S Carter, Elizabeth R Gerstner, William T Curry, Marcela V Maus, Bryan D Choi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Context: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is an exciting modality of immunotherapy that has revolutionized the treatment of hematologic malignancies. However, translating this success to malignant gliomas such as glioblastoma (GBM) and diffuse midline glioma (DMG) remains a formidable challenge due to multiple biologic, anatomic, and immunologic factors. Despite these hurdles, a number of clinical trials deployed over the last decade have increased optimism for the potential of CAR T cell therapy in glioma treatment.
Evidence synthesis: We highlight historical and ongoing clinical trials of CAR T cell therapy in glioma, with a focus on key tumor-associated antigens such as IL-13Rα2, HER2, EGFR, EGFRvIII, EphA2, GD2, and B7-H3. Early studies established proof-of-concept for antigen-specific CAR T cell targeting, yet immune evasion mechanisms such as antigen downregulation and limited CAR T cell persistence remain significant obstacles. Recent approaches, including multiantigen targeting, alternative cell sources, and innovations in delivery routes offer promising strategies to overcome these challenges.
Conclusions: The rapid evolution of investigational CAR T cell therapies portends great potential for the future of glioma treatment. Future studies will need to refine antigen targeting strategies, optimize CAR T cell persistence, and integrate combinatorial approaches to fully harness the therapeutic potential of this modality and improve the therapeutic window against brain tumors.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Neuro-Oncology is a multi-disciplinary journal encompassing basic, applied, and clinical investigations in all research areas as they relate to cancer and the central nervous system. It provides a single forum for communication among neurologists, neurosurgeons, radiotherapists, medical oncologists, neuropathologists, neurodiagnosticians, and laboratory-based oncologists conducting relevant research. The Journal of Neuro-Oncology does not seek to isolate the field, but rather to focus the efforts of many disciplines in one publication through a format which pulls together these diverse interests. More than any other field of oncology, cancer of the central nervous system requires multi-disciplinary approaches. To alleviate having to scan dozens of journals of cell biology, pathology, laboratory and clinical endeavours, JNO is a periodical in which current, high-quality, relevant research in all aspects of neuro-oncology may be found.