| Literature DB >> 27532020 |
Todd Crocenzi1, Benjamin Cottam1, Pippa Newell2, Ronald F Wolf3, Paul D Hansen3, Chet Hammill3, Matthew C Solhjem4, Yue-Yun To1, Amy Greathouse1, Garth Tormoen5, Zeljka Jutric6, Kristina Young7, Keith S Bahjat1, Michael J Gough1, Marka R Crittenden7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preclinical studies have shown synergy between radiation therapy and immunotherapy. However, in almost all preclinical models, radiation is delivered in single doses or short courses of high doses (hypofractionated radiation). By contrast in most clinical settings, radiation is delivered as standard small daily fractions of 1.8-2 Gy to achieve total doses of 50-54 Gy (fractionated radiation). We do not yet know the optimal dose and scheduling of radiation for combination with chemotherapy and immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Fractionation; Gemcitabine; Homeostatic repopulation; IL-15; IL-7; Immunotherapy; Lymphocytes; Lymphodepletion; Radiation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27532020 PMCID: PMC4986363 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-016-0149-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Patient characteristics
| Study | ICRT (fractionated) | CRIT (Hypofractionated) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Median | Range | Median | Range |
| 61 | 41-74 | 64.5 | 53-82 | |
| Sex | Male | Female | Male | Female |
| 6 (60.0 %) | 4 (40.0 %) | 5 (50.0 %) | 5 (50.0 %) | |
| Diagnosis | Locally advanced | Borderline resectable | Locally advanced | Borderline resectable |
| 7 (70.0 %) | 3 (30.0 %) | 2 (20.0 %) | 8 (80.0 %) | |
| Race | Caucasian | All other | Caucasian | All other |
| 10 (100 %) | 0 (0 %) | 9 (90 %) | 1 (10 %) | |
| Stage | IIA-IIB | III-IV | IIA-IIB | III-IV |
| 4 | 5 | 7 | 2 | |
| Surgery | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| 4 | 5 | 6 | 3 | |
Fig. 1Effect of conventional neoadjuvant chemoradiation on immune cells in patient blood. a Absolute numbers of i) CD3+, ii) CD8+, iii) CD4+ and iv) CD4+CD25+ T cells as well as v) SSCintCD14+ monocytes and vi) SSChiCD15+ granulocytes by flow cytometry of fresh peripheral blood over the course of the study. Individual patients are gray, the mean is black. Dotted lines show sampling times and shows periods of neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy (red rectangles), neoadjuvant chemoradiation (blue bar) according to the trial schema provided in Additional file 1: Figure S1. b Analysis of the proportions of i) CD4 and ii) CD8 subpopulations in PBMC collected pretreatment (open circles) and post-treatment (closed circles). Key: NS – not significant. * p < 0.05
Normalization of absolute lymphocyte counts by CBC
| STUDY | ICRT (Fract) | CRIT (Hypo) |
|---|---|---|
| Percent of patients with normal ALC for 2 consecutive measurements post RT | 40 % (4/10) | 70 % (7/10) |
| Mean time to normal ALC for patients that normalize | 272 days (108–523 days) | 50 days (all patients) |
Fig. 2Role of homeostatic repopulation through cytokines and cytokine responses. a Patient serum collected prior to treatment (pre) and at the end of treatment (post) were tested for cytokine levels by multiplex assay. Individual patients are gray, the mean is black. b-d PBMC collected prior to treatment and at the end of treatment were treated with a range of cytokines for and analyzed for i) pSTAT1, ii) pSTAT3 or iii) pSTAT5 expression by intracellular flow cytometry. Surface staining of these mixed populations identified pSTAT activation in (b) CD4+ T cells, (c) CD8+ T cells or (d) CD14+ monocytes. Individual patient’s pre and post treatment values are connected. Graphs show change in pSTAT MFI over control (vehicle alone) stimulated cells. Colors highlight STATs that respond to a particular stimulation in each cell type. Key: NS – not significant. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01
Fig. 3Effect of hypofraction on immune cells in patient blood. a Absolute numbers of i) CD3+, ii) CD8+, iii) CD4+ and iv) SSCintCD14+ monocytes by flow cytometry of fresh peripheral blood in patients on a conventionally fractionated regimen (Fract, open symbols) versus a hypofractionated regimen (Hypo, closed symbols). The samples immediately pre-RT and immediately post-RT are highlighted on the first graph. b comparison of absolute numbers of i) CD3+, ii) CD8+, iii) CD4+ and iv) SSCintCD14+ monocytes by flow cytometry of fresh peripheral blood immediately following completion of radiation therapy in patients on a conventionally fractionated regimen (Fract, open symbols) versus a hypofractionated regimen (Hypo, closed symbols). c Analysis of the proportions of i) CD4 and ii) CD8 subpopulations in PBMC collected pretreatment (open circles) and post-treatment with a hypofractionated regimen (closed circles)
Fig. 4Effect of treatment regimen on early homeostatic cytokines. Patient serum collected prior to treatment (pre), immediately following completion of radiation therapy (post) and at the end of treatment (end) from patients on i) a conventionally fractionated regimen (Fract) versus ii) a hypofractionated regimen (Hypo) were tested for (a) IL-7 and (b) IL-15 cytokine levels by ultrasensitive multiplex assay. Key: NS – not significant. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001
Fig. 5Link between planning target volume (PTV), spleen dose and T cell count. a) i) Graph showing the PTV for patients receiving a conventionally fractionated regimen (Fract) versus a hypofractionated regimen (Hypo). A subset of patients receiving a conventionally fractionated regimen exhibited a PTV greater than 400 (square symbols). ii) Post-chemoRT blood T cell counts are shown for patients with PTV greater than or less than 400 receiving a fractionated regimen (Fract) versus a hypofractionated regimen (Hypo). b) Relationship between mean spleen dose (Gy) and post-chemoRT blood T cell counts for patients receiving a hypofractionated regimen. Each symbol represents one patient. Key: NS – not significant. ** p < 0.01