4.7 Review

Molecular Pathways and Mechanisms of LAG3 in Cancer Therapy

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 23, Pages 5030-5039

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-21-2390

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Funding

  1. NIH [R35 CA263850, P01 AI108545, R01 AI144422, P50 CA254865]
  2. NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center Support CORE grant [CA047904]

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Immunotherapy targeting coinhibitory receptors has achieved success in treating malignancies, but only a subset of patients respond well. LAG3, an inhibitory receptor, holds promise as a target for immunotherapy and its combination with PD1 can enhance anti-tumor immunity. Clinical trials have shown the effectiveness and safety of anti-LAG3 and anti-PD1 combination therapy in metastatic melanoma.
Immunotherapy targeting coinhibitory receptors has been highly successful in treating a wide variety of malignancies; however, only a subset of patients exhibits durable responses. The first FDA -approved immunotherapeutics targeting coinhibitory receptors PD1 and CTLA4, alone or in combination, significantly improved survival but were also accompanied by substantial toxicity in combination. The third FDA-approved immune checkpoint inhib-itor targets LAG3, a coinhibitory receptor expressed on activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, especially in settings of long-term anti-genic stimulation, such as chronic viral infection or cancer. Mech-anistically, LAG3 expression limits both the expansion of activated T cells and the size of the memory pool, suggesting that LAG3 may be a promising target for immunotherapy. Importantly, the mech-anism(s) by which LAG3 contributes to CD8+ T-cell exhaustion may be distinct from those governed by PD1, indicating that the combination of anti-LAG3 and anti-PD1 may synergistically enhance antitumor immunity. Clinical studies evaluating the role of anti-LAG3 in combination with anti-PD1 are underway, and recent phase III trial results in metastatic melanoma demonstrate both the efficacy and safety of this combination. Further ongoing clinical trials are evaluating this combination across multiple tumor types and the adjuvant setting, with accompanying translational and biomarker-focused studies designed to elucidate the molecular pathways that lead to improved antitumor T-cell responses follow-ing dual blockade of PD1 and LAG3. Overall, LAG3 plays an important role in limiting T-cell activation and has now become part of the repertoire of combinatorial immunotherapeutics avail-able for the treatment of metastatic melanoma.

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