4.6 Review

NK Cell-Based Immunotherapy and Therapeutic Perspective in Gliomas

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.751183

Keywords

natural killer cells; alloreactivity; chimeric antigen receptor; adoptive cell immunotherapy; glioma

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82072768]
  2. Sino German Cooperation and Exchange Project (Mobility Programme) [M-0020]
  3. Research Fund for Clinical and Translational Medicine of Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences [2020-I2M-CT-A-024]
  4. Construction Project of Multi Omics Platform for Major Brain Diseases [PXM2019_026280_000002]
  5. [2020-I2M-C]
  6. [T-A-024]

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NK cell-based immunotherapy shows promising potential for treating glioma due to its unique features, but faces challenges such as inadequate CAR design and lagging application compared to hematological malignancies. Further strategies are needed to enhance the efficacy of NK cell-based cancer immunotherapy in glioma treatment.
Glioma is the most common malignant primary brain tumor diagnosed in adults. Current therapies are unable to improve its clinical prognosis, imposing the need for innovative therapeutic approaches. The main reason for the poor prognosis is the great cell heterogeneity of the tumor and its immunosuppressive microenvironment. Development of new therapies that avoid this immune evasion could improve the response to the current treatments. Natural killer (NK) cells are an intriguing candidate for the next wave of therapies because of several unique features that they possess. For example, NK cell-based immunotherapy causes minimal graft-versus-host disease. Cytokine release syndrome is less likely to occur during chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-NK therapy, and CAR-NK cells can kill targets in a CAR-independent manner. However, NK cell-based therapy in treating glioma faces several difficulties. For example, CAR molecules are not sufficiently well designed so that they will thoroughly release functioning NK cells. Compared to hematological malignancies, the application of many potential NK cell-based therapies in glioma lags far behind. Here, we review several issues of NK cells and propose several strategies that will improve the efficacy of NK cell-based cancer immunotherapy in the treatment of glioma.

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