4.6 Article

Epstein-Barr virus-targeted therapy in nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF CANCER RESEARCH AND CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 141, Issue 10, Pages 1845-1857

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00432-015-1969-3

Keywords

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma; Epstein-Barr virus; Targeted therapy; Metastatic disease; Advanced disease

Categories

Funding

  1. Netherlands Government [ZonMW 95110069]
  2. Netherlands Cancer Society [KWF VU2011-4555, KWF-VU2010-4809]

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Despite successful primary treatment of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), the incidence of distant metastasis remains 25-34 %. Treatment options are limited, and survival is poor. Intratumoural Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was used as treatment target. In NPC, EBV is present in a latent state, expressing only few non-immunogenic viral products. Gemcitabine and valproic acid can trigger EBV to the lytic state, wherein viral kinases are expressed, making EBV-positive tumour cells susceptible for antiviral therapy with, i.e. valganciclovir, and inducing an EBV-specific immune response. This drug combination was applied in eight patients with EBV-positive NPC, refractory to conventional treatment. The primary endpoints were safety, tolerability and clinical response. Secondary endpoint was to get proof of concept based on biomarkers, i.e. pharmacokinetics, EBV-DNA load in whole blood and nasopharyngeal brushes, EBV-RNA profiling for proof of lytic induction, EBV-IgG and EBV-IgA levels and diversity and EBV-specific T cell response. The best observed clinical response was partial in two patients (25 %) and stable disease in three patients (37.5 %). The median survival was 9 months (95 % confidence interval 7-17 months). Effective dose levels were reached. Peaking of EBV-DNA loads in blood and brush proved the biological effect on EBV during most treatment cycles. In one patient, RNA profiling confirmed lytic EBV induction. EBV-IgG and EBV-IgA antibody levels were already high before treatment and did not change during treatment. No changes in EBV-specific T cell response were detected. The treatment was safe with manageable side effects, clinical response was observed, and viral activation corroborated.

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