| Literature DB >> 28447024 |
Abstract
Radiotherapy is employed in the treatment of over 50% of cancer patients. However, this therapy approach is limited to mainly treating localized disease. In 1953, Mole described the remarkable abscopal effect, whereby, localized radiotherapy of a patient's primary tumor might engender regression of cancer at distant sites, which were not irradiated. Current consensus is that if the abscopal effect can be efficaciously leveraged, it would transform the field of radiation oncology, extending the use of radiotherapy to treatment of both localized and metastatic disease. A close examination of the literature on the abscopal effect proffers a disruptive new hypothesis for consideration in future clinical trials. This hypothesis is that generating a subcutaneous human tumor autograft as the primary tumor may be a more efficacious approach to prime the abscopal effect. Following the preclinical data, the merits and demerits of such an approach are examined in this article.Entities:
Keywords: abscopal effect; immunoadjuvants; immunoregulation; metastasis; radiotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28447024 PMCID: PMC5388832 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2017.00066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Preclinical studies demonstrating the abscopal effect when using radiotherapy in conjunction with immunoadjuvants.
| Tumor type | Irradiated site; dose | Immunoadjuvant; dose | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lewis lung carcinoma | Subcutaneous flank; 6 Gy | Anti-CD40; 20 μg | Ngwa et al. ( |
| 67NR mammary carcinoma | Subcutaneous; 3 Gy × 8 Gy | Fms-like tyrosine kinase receptor 3 ligand (Flt3-L); 10 μg × 10 | Habets et al. ( |
| TUBO mammary/MCA38 colon | Subcutaneous flank; 12 Gy | Anti-PD-L1; 200 μg × 4 | Deng et al. ( |
| FM3A mammary | Subcutaneous flank; 6 Gy | ECI301; 600 ng | Kanegasaki et al. ( |
| Colon26 | Subcutaneous flank; 20 Gy | IL-2; 20,000 U in 0.1 mL of PBS | Yasuda et al. ( |
| TSA mammary/MCA38 colon | Subcutaneous flank; 20, 24, and 30 Gy | 9H10; 200 μg × 3 | Dewan et al. ( |
| Colon26/MethA sarcoma/LLC | Subcutaneous flank; 6 Gy | ECI301, 2 μg × 3 | Shiraishi et al. ( |
| SCC VII | Subcutaneous femur; 4–10 Gy | DC | Akutsu et al. ( |
| 4T1 mammary | Subcutaneous flank; 12–24 Gy | 9H10 | Demaria et al. ( |
| 67NR mammary | Subcutaneous flank, flank; 2–6 Gy | Flt3-L | Demaria et al. ( |
| D5 melanoma/MCA 205 sarcoma MethA | Subcutaneous flank; 42.5 Gy | DC | Teitz-Tennenbaum et al. ( |
| C3 cervical/sarcoma | Subcutaneous hind leg; 30–50 Gy | DC | Nikitina and Gabrilovich ( |
| LCC | Subcutaneous foot; 60 Gy | Flt3-L | Chakravarty et al. ( |
LCC, Lewis lung carcinoma; DCs, dendritic cells; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma.
Figure 1Schematic of potential .
A partial list of current clinical trials that study combined radiotherapy and immunotherapy (based on .
| Identifier | Study title |
|---|---|
| NCT03035890 | Hypofractionated radiation therapy to improve immunotherapy response in non-small cell lung cancer |
| NCT02710643 | “MIRO” molecularly oriented immuno-radiotherapy (FIL_MIRO) |
| NCT02579005 | Radio-immuno-modulation in lung cancer |
| NCT02864615 | Safety and preliminary efficacy of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) in patients with metastatic RCC treated with targeted or IO therapy |
| NCT02463994 | A pilot study of MPDL3280A and HIGRT in metastatic none small cell lung cancer |
| NCT02839265 | FLT3 ligand immunotherapy and stereotactic radiotherapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (FLT3) |
| NCT02710253 | Phase II trial of salvage radiation therapy to induce systemic disease regression after progression on systemic immunotherapy |
| NCT03042156 | Immunotherapy and palliative radiotherapy combined in patients with advanced malignancy |
| NCT02843165 | Checkpoint blockade immunotherapy combined with stereotactic body radiation in advanced metastatic disease |
| NCT01436968 | Phase 3 study of ProstAtak® immunotherapy with standard radiation therapy for localized prostate cancer (PrTK03) |
| NCT02677155 | Sequential intranodal immunotherapy combined with anti-PD1 (pembrolizumab) in follicular lymphoma (Lymvac-2) |
| NCT02239900 | Ipilimumab and SBRT in advanced solid tumors |
Figure 2Number of ongoing clinical trials on combined radiotherapy and immunotherapy per disease site (summarized from the Table .
Figure 3Illustration of (A) patient with local and metastatic tumor; (B) subcutaneous autograft generated; (C) treatment of subcutaneous tumor with radiotherapy and immunoadjuvant; (D) regression of autograft, primary tumor, and metastasis.
Merits and demerits of employing subcutaneous tumor autografts to prime a more efficacious abscopal effect.
| Merits | Demerits |
|---|---|
Most preclinical studies demonstrating effective abscopal responses have employed subcutaneous models The skin layers are known to be highly populated with professional antigen-presenting cells, which play an important role in effectively inducing abscopal responses. There may be better control of the priming process when using subcutaneous tumors, since priming could be done at optimal tumor sizes or time points, etc. Radiotherapy treatment planning for priming the subcutaneous tumors should be easier if location is chosen distant from sensitive organs at risk. There is an opportunity to use smart biomaterial skin implants for sustained delivery of immunoadjuvants toward more effective treatment outcomes as seen in vaccine studies Benefits of this approach may outweigh the risks for certain groups of patients | Subcutaneous tumors are expedient but provide limited recapitulation of the tumor microenvironment There is a need to first give patients an additional lesion before treating them Patients may reject autografts or homografts |