4.4 Review

Gene therapy and targeted toxins for glioma

Journal

CURRENT GENE THERAPY
Volume 5, Issue 6, Pages 535-557

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/156652305774964631

Keywords

glioma; gene therapy; dendritic cells; CD4T cells; CD8T cells; immunotherapy; cytokines; Flt3L; HSV1-TK

Funding

  1. FIC NIH HHS [1 R03 TW006273-01, R03 TW006273] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [R21 NS047298, R01 NS074387, R01 NS044556, 1R01 NS44556.01, U01 NS052465, F32NS053034-01, R01 NS061107, U54 NS045309, F32 NS053034, R01 NS042893, R01 NS057711, R21 NS054143, 1R21 NS047298-01, U54 NS045309-01, 1 R01 NS 42893.01, R01 NS054193] Funding Source: Medline

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The most common primary brain tumor in adults is glioblastoma. These tumors are highly invasive and aggressive with a mean survival time of nine to twelve months from diagnosis to death. Current treatment modalities are unable to significantly prolong survival in patients diagnosed with glioblastoma. As such, glioma is an attractive target for developing novel therapeutic approaches utilizing gene therapy. This review will examine the available preclinical models for glioma including xenographs, syngeneic and genetic models. Several promising therapeutic targets are currently being pursued in pre-clinical investigations. These targets will be reviewed by mechanism of action, i.e., conditional cytotoxic, targeted toxins, oncolytic viruses, tumor suppressors/oncogenes, and immune stimulatory approaches. Preclinical gene therapy paradigms aim to determine which strategies will provide rapid tumor regression and long-term protection from recurrence. While a wide range of potential targets are being investigated preclinically, only the most efficacious are further transitioned into clinical trial paradigms. Clinical trials reported to date are summarized including results from conditionally cytotoxic, targeted toxins, oncolytic viruses and oncogene targeting approaches. Clinical trial results have not been as robust as preclinical models predicted, this could be due to the limitations of the GBM models employed. Once this is addressed, and we develop effective gene therapies in models that better replicate the clinical scenario, gene therapy will provide a powerful approach to treat and manage brain tumors.

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