TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative impact of immunomodulation versus oncolysis with cytokine-expressing virus therapeutics
AU - Kim, Peter S.
AU - Crivelli, Joseph J.
AU - Choi, Il Kyu
AU - Yun, Chae Ok
AU - Wares, Joanna R.
PY - 2015/8/1
Y1 - 2015/8/1
N2 - The past century's description of oncolytic virotherapy as a cancer treatment involving specially-engineered viruses that exploit immune deficiencies to selectively lyse cancer cells is no longer adequate. Some of the most promising therapeutic candidates are now being engineered to produce immunostimulatory factors, such as cytokines and co-stimulatory molecules, which, in addition to viral oncolysis, initiate a cytotoxic immune attack against the tumor. This study addresses the combined effects of viral oncolysis and T-cellmediated oncolysis. We employ a mathematical model of virotherapy that induces release of cytokine IL-12 and co-stimulatory molecule 4-1BB ligand. We found that the model closely matches previously published data, and while viral oncolysis is fundamental in reducing tumor burden, increased stimulation of cytotoxic T cells leads to a short-term reduction in tumor size, but a faster relapse. In addition, we found that combinations of specialist viruses that express either IL-12 or 4-1BBL might initially act more potently against tumors than a generalist virus that simultaneously expresses both, but the advantage is likely not large enough to replace treatment using the generalist virus. Finally, according to our model and its current assumptions, virotherapy appears to be optimizable through targeted design and treatment combinations to substantially improve therapeutic outcomes.
AB - The past century's description of oncolytic virotherapy as a cancer treatment involving specially-engineered viruses that exploit immune deficiencies to selectively lyse cancer cells is no longer adequate. Some of the most promising therapeutic candidates are now being engineered to produce immunostimulatory factors, such as cytokines and co-stimulatory molecules, which, in addition to viral oncolysis, initiate a cytotoxic immune attack against the tumor. This study addresses the combined effects of viral oncolysis and T-cellmediated oncolysis. We employ a mathematical model of virotherapy that induces release of cytokine IL-12 and co-stimulatory molecule 4-1BB ligand. We found that the model closely matches previously published data, and while viral oncolysis is fundamental in reducing tumor burden, increased stimulation of cytotoxic T cells leads to a short-term reduction in tumor size, but a faster relapse. In addition, we found that combinations of specialist viruses that express either IL-12 or 4-1BBL might initially act more potently against tumors than a generalist virus that simultaneously expresses both, but the advantage is likely not large enough to replace treatment using the generalist virus. Finally, according to our model and its current assumptions, virotherapy appears to be optimizable through targeted design and treatment combinations to substantially improve therapeutic outcomes.
KW - Adenovirus
KW - Co-stimulatory molecules
KW - Cytokines
KW - Mathematical model
KW - Oncolytic virotherapy
KW - Ordinary differential equations model
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84927611950&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3934/mbe.2015.12.841
DO - 10.3934/mbe.2015.12.841
M3 - Article
C2 - 25974336
AN - SCOPUS:84927611950
SN - 1547-1063
VL - 12
SP - 841
EP - 858
JO - Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
JF - Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
IS - 4
ER -