4.7 Article

Molecular Pathways: Targeting B7-H3 (CD276) for Human Cancer Immunotherapy

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 22, Issue 14, Pages 3425-3431

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-2428

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01CA175495, R01DK100525]
  2. U.S. Department of Defense Established Investigator Idea Development Award [PC131008]
  3. Pfizer CTI
  4. Jiangsu Hengrui Medicine Co.
  5. Irma T. Hirschl/Monique Weill-Caulier Trusts
  6. CDMRP [672432, PC131008] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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B7-H3 (CD276) is an important immune checkpoint member of the B7 and CD28 families. Induced on antigen-presenting cells, B7-H3 plays an important role in the inhibition of T-cell function. Importantly, B7-H3 is highly overexpressed on a wide range of human solid cancers and often correlates with both negative prognosis and poor clinical outcome in patients. Challenges remain to identify the receptor(s) of B7-H3 and thus better elucidate the role of the B7-H3 pathway in immune responses and tumor evasion. With a preferential expression on tumor cells, B7-H3 is an attractive target for cancer immunotherapy. Based on the clinical success of inhibitory immune checkpoint blockade (CTLA-4, PD-1, and PD-L1), mAbs against B7-H3 appear to be a promising therapeutic strategy worthy of development. An unconventional mAb against B7-H3 with antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity is currently being evaluated in a phase I clinical trial and has shown encouraging preliminary results. Additional therapeutic approaches in targeting B7-H3, such as blocking mAbs, bispecific mAbs, chimeric antigen receptor T cells, small-molecule inhibitors, and combination therapies, should be evaluated, as these technologies have already shown positive results in various cancer settings. A better understanding of the B7-H3 pathway in humans will surely help to further optimize associated cancer immunotherapies. (C) 2016 AACR.

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