Abstract

Simple SummaryImmunotherapy is achieving impressive results in the treatment of several cancers. While the main strategies aim to re-invigorate the specific lymphocyte anti-tumor response, many studies underline that altered myeloid cell frequency and functions can dramatically interfere with the responsiveness to cancer therapies. Therefore, many novel strategies targeting TAMs and MDSCs in combination with classical treatments are under continuous evolution at both pre-clinical and clinical levels, showing encouraging results. Herein, we depict a comprehensive overview of myeloid cell generation and function in a cancer setting, and the most relevant strategies for their targeting that are currently in clinical use or under pre-clinical development.In recent years, the immune system has emerged as a critical regulator of tumor development, progression and dissemination. Advanced therapeutic approaches targeting immune cells are currently under clinical use and improvement for the treatment of patients affected by advanced malignancies. Among these, anti-PD1/PD-L1 and anti-CTLA4 immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are the most effective immunotherapeutic drugs at present. In spite of these advances, great variability in responses to therapy exists among patients, probably due to the heterogeneity of both cancer cells and immune responses, which manifest in diverse forms in the tumor microenvironment (TME). The variability of the immune profile within TME and its prognostic significance largely depend on the frequency of the infiltrating myeloid cells, which often represent the predominant population, characterized by high phenotypic heterogeneity. The generation of heterogeneous myeloid populations endowed with tumor-promoting activities is typically promoted by growing tumors, indicating the sequential levels of myeloid reprogramming as possible antitumor targets. This work reviews the current knowledge on the events governing protumoral myelopoiesis, analyzing the mechanisms that drive the expansion of major myeloid subsets, as well as their functional properties, and highlighting recent translational strategies for clinical developments.

Highlights

  • While the functional plasticity of myeloid cells has assumed considerable interest as a potential level of therapeutic intervention in tumors, the mechanisms that drive their protumoral phenotype are only partially elucidated, and research is mainly focused on understanding the intratumoral signals capable of polarizing myeloid cell functions

  • The role of chemokines in the recruitment of myeloid cells to the tumor site influences specific antitumor immunity, metastasis formation and angiogenesis, playing a central approach to inhibit the accumulation of M-myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) and tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in the tumor microenvironment (TME) and to limit the mobilization of bone marrow monocytes into the blood stream, since the activation of

  • In a mouse model of lung adenocarcinoma, a specific subset of Tumor-Associated Neutrophils (TANs) characterized by high expression of the sialic acid binding Ig-like lectin F (SiglecFhigh ) and associated with several pro-tumor functions was described to accumulate in TME [89]

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Summary

A Translational Perspective

Augusto Bleve 1,† , Francesca Maria Consonni 2,† , Chiara Porta 2,3 , Valentina Garlatti 2 and Antonio Sica 1,2, *. While the main strategies aim to re-invigorate the specific lymphocyte anti-tumor response, many studies underline that altered myeloid cell frequency and functions can dramatically interfere with the responsiveness to cancer therapies. Many novel strategies targeting TAMs and MDSCs in combination with classical treatments are under continuous evolution at both pre-clinical and clinical levels, showing encouraging results. We depict a comprehensive overview of myeloid cell generation and function in a cancer setting, and the most relevant strategies for their targeting that are currently in clinical use or under pre-clinical development

Introduction
Emergency Myelopoiesis
Myeloid Cells Mobilization
Functional
Influence
Pre-Clinical
TAMs Targeting Approaches
MDSCs Targeting Approaches
Clinical Advances in Targeting Tumor-Associated Myeloid Cells
Clinical Trials Targeting TAMs
Abrogating TAM Enrichment
Re-Education of TAMs
Clinical Trials Targeting MDSCs
Abrogating MDSCs Enrichment
Re-Education of MDSCs
Findings
Conclusions and Future Perspective
Full Text
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