| Literature DB >> 29644213 |
Joe Abdo1, David L Cornell1,2, Sumeet K Mittal1,3, Devendra K Agrawal1.
Abstract
Since the 1920s the gold standard for treating cancer has been surgery, which is typically preceded or followed with chemotherapy and/or radiation, a process that perhaps contributes to the destruction of a patient's immune defense system. Cryosurgery ablation of a solid tumor is mechanistically similar to a vaccination where hundreds of unique antigens from a heterogeneous population of tumor cells derived from the invading cancer are released. However, releasing tumor-derived self-antigens into circulation may not be sufficient enough to overcome the checkpoint escape mechanisms some cancers have evolved to avoid immune responses. The potentiated immune response caused by blocking tumor checkpoints designed to prevent programmed cell death may be the optimal treatment method for the immune system to recognize these new circulating cryoablated self-antigens. Preclinical and clinical evidence exists for the complementary roles for Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein (CTLA-4) and PD-1 antagonists in regulating adaptive immunity, demonstrating that combination immunotherapy followed by cryosurgery provides a more targeted immune response to distant lesions, a phenomenon known as the abscopal effect. We propose that when the host's immune system has been "primed" with combined anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 adjuvants prior to cryosurgery, the preserved cryoablated tumor antigens will be presented and processed by the host's immune system resulting in a robust cytotoxic CD8+ T-cell response. Based on recent investigations and well-described biochemical mechanisms presented herein, a polyvalent autoinoculation of many tumor-specific antigens, derived from a heterogeneous population of tumor cancer cells, would present to an unhindered yet pre-sensitized immune system yielding a superior advantage in locating, recognizing, and destroying tumor cells throughout the body.Entities:
Keywords: abscopal effect; anti-CTLA-4; anti-PD1; autoinoculation; cancer immunity; cryoablation; immunotherapy; self-antigens
Year: 2018 PMID: 29644213 PMCID: PMC5882833 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Distant history of the rudiments of immunotherapy and cryosurgery. Efforts to stimulate or potentiate the immune response to diseases date back a millenium with the Greeks in fifth century BC attempting immunotherapy to combat the plague and ancient Chinese medical innovations to combat smallpox in 1000 AD. More recently, immune adjuvants such as Coly’s toxin in the 1890s and Freund’s adjuvant introduced in the 1940s yielded remarkable tumor regression. Surprisingly, injection of peri-tumor streptococcal infection results in a 39% reduction in cancer. Why further investigations of these adjuvants have fallen out of favor is not clear, however, new approaches in the effort to eradicate cancer took a turn to newer agents including chemotherapy, and radiation therapy, either in serially or parallel fashion along with hormonal adjuncts. The abscopal effect is defined as: the regression of distant metastases following treatment of the primary cancer. The first definitive observed abscopal effect was seen with radiation treatment of brain metastases in 1953. The abscopal effect was described in cryosurgery of an advance prostate cancer in 1963. In 1967 Yantorno et al. first identified and described how cryosurgical ablative intervention resulted in the production of antibodies directed at antigenic material linked to the frozen tissue itself. They reported that freezing male rabbit accessory tissue which was sensitized with glandular cellular components via injection led to the formation of circulating antibodies with a specified target.
Pioneering cryotherapy studies in the oncology arena.
| Study | Indication | Results | Reference | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FACT—FibroAdenoma Cryoablation Treatment Registry | Benign breast fibro adenoma | For patients with a fibroadenoma smaller than 2 cm, complete resolution can be expected in 66% of patients at 6 months and 75% of patients at 12 months, respectively | Nurko et al. ( | 2005 |
| Percutaneous ultrasonography-guided pancreatic cryoablation: feasibility and safety assessment | Stage II–IV pancreatic cancer | Mean and median survival was 15.9 and 12.6 months, respectively. The 6-, 12-, and 24-month survival rates were 82.8, 54.7, and 27.3%. 27 out of 32 patients experienced a ≥50% reduction in pain score | Niu et al. ( | 2012 |
| ECLIPSE—Evaluating Cryoablation of Metastatic Lung Tumors in Patients | Colon (40%), Kidney (23%), and Sarcomas (8%) | Local tumor control rates were 56 of 58 (96.6%) and 49 of 52 (94.2%) at 6 and 12 months, respectively. 1-year overall survival rate was 97.5% | de Baere et al. ( | 2015 |
| CT guided cryoablation for metastatic bone and soft tissue tumors | Metastatic bone and soft tissue tumors | At the final follow up, 4 of 9 patients showed no evidence of disease, 2 of 9 were alive with disease, and 3 of 9 patients died of disease | Susa et al. ( | 2016 |
| A Phase II Trial of Cryoablation Therapy in the Treatment of Invasive Breast Carcinoma | Early stage breast cancer | Successful ablation occurred in 80/87 (92%) of cancers | Simmons et al. ( | 2016 |
| Safety and efficacy of endoscopic cryotherapy for esophageal cancer. | Early stage esophageal adenocarcinoma | 86 patients completed treatment with complete response of intraluminal disease in 55.8%, including complete response in 76.3% for T1a, 45.8% for T1b, 66.2% for all T1, and 6.7% for T2. Mean follow-up was 18.4 months | Tsai et al. ( | 2017 |
| Cryoablation w/natural killer cell therapy and Herceptin in recurrent breast cancer patients | HER2-overexpressing breast cancer | 43.75% of patients treated with all three modalities achieved partial regression and 31.25% patients exhibited stable disease. Only 2 of 16 (12.5%) patients exhibited progressive disease. 3 of 16 patients had complete regression | Liang et al. ( | 2017 |
| Cryo-Assisted Resection En Bloc, and Cryoablation | Breast cancer | The frozen site extruded the dye that was distributed through the unfrozen tumor, the breast tissue, and the resection cavity for 12 of 14 patients | Korpan et al. ( | 2018 |
| SOLSTICE—Study of Cryoablation for Metastatic Lung Tumors | Neoplasm Metastasis | Evaluate the safety and efficacy of cryoablation therapy in patients with pulmonary metastatic disease. Patients will undergo cryoablation of at least 1 metastatic pulmonary tumor and will be followed 24 months post cryoablation | Callstrom, M | 2019 |
| Pembrolizumab and Cryosurgery in Treating Newly Diagnosed Prostate Cancer | Oligo-metastatic Prostate Cancer | Phase II trial analyzing the safety and efficacy of pembrolizumab and cryosurgery along with short term androgen ablation to treat patients with oligo-metastatic prostate cancer | Ross, A | 2019 |
| trūFreeze® Spray Cryotherapy Patient Registry | Esophageal adenocarcinoma/Barrett’s esophagus | Currently collecting efficacy and outcomes data related to the use of trūFreeze® spray cryotherapy for the treatment of unwanted tissue in the pulmonary and gastrointestinal settings | Shaheen, N | 2020 |
| FROST—Cryoablation of Small Breast Tumors in Early Stage Breast Cancer | Breast Cancer | The hypothesis is that cryoablation will completely destroy early stage invasive breast cancer tumors in a selected population of women who may otherwise be adequately treated with surgery. No results yet | Holmes, D | 2021 |
Results of clinical trials and preclinical studies attempting to determine the safety and efficacy of cryoablation therapy in a myriad of cancers and stages. Overall, cryotherapy is deemed a safe and efficacious method for primary tumor destruction as well as efficient in eradicating metastatic lung lesions as a palliative measure. Large, multicenter clinical trials are also ongoing with the details included herein (.
Figure 2Immunotherapy followed by cryotherapy for enhanced abscopal effect: If polyvalent, auto-inoculating tumor vaccines can be augmented and potentiated with the combined checkpoint inhibitors cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein (CTLA-4) and PD-1, then theoretically, a robust abscopal effect should be observed within the host, not only by cryosurgery tumor ablation/destruction of the primary lesion but also by abrogation of regional and distant metastases along with conferred immunity at both local and distant tumor sites. Hence, through synergistic processes these checkpoint inhibitors exert their effects on the immune processing of a large polyvalent vaccine caused by cryosurgical destruction and release of a large population of heterogenous tumor antigens; the hosts immune system should respond accordingly as is currently being witnessed and reported in the literature today via the very same processes encountered with radiation oncology in combination with these novel checkpoint inhibitors CTLA-4 and PD-1, yielding a robust cryosurgery-based abscopal effect.
Clinical trials that have yielded robust abscopal effects.
| Study | Indication | Results | First Author | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical response to cellular immunotherapy and intensity-modulated radiation | Advanced solid tumor cancers | Complete responses were achieved in 34 of 58 of recurrent lesions. Partial responses were achieved in 17 of 58 patients. Patients manifested an increase in CD8+CD56+ lymphocytes. | Hasumi et al. ( | 2013 |
| Abscopal response to radiation and anti-CTLA-4 therapy | Metastatic non-small cell lung adenocarcinoma | Reported the first abscopal response in a treatment-refractory lung cancer. Increase in tumor-infiltrating cytotoxic lymphocytes. Tumor regression observed. 1 year after treatment patient has no evidence of disease. | Golden et al. ( | 2013 |
| Phase II: anti-CTLA-4 alone or in combination with radiotherapy | Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer | Among patients receiving 10 mg/kg ± radiotherapy, 8 had PSA declines of ≥50% (duration: 3–13 + months), one had complete response (duration: 11.3 + months), and 6 had stable disease (duration: 2.8–6.1 months). | Slovin et al. ( | 2013 |
| Abscopal effect of anti-CTLA-4 and radiation therapy | Melanoma with brain metastases | Patients who received ipilimumab had a median survival of 18.3 months, compared with 5.3 months. 40% of ipilimumab patients had a partial response compared to 9.1% of patients who just received radiation. | Silk et al. ( | 2013 |
| Abscopal effect of radiation and immunotherapy | Stage IV melanoma | All metastases, including unirradiated liver lesions had completely resolved, consistent with a complete response. | Hiniker et al. ( | 2012 |
| Abscopal effect of anti-CTLA-4 therapy in melanoma (NEJM) | Stage III and IV melanoma | Tumor shrinkage with specific antibody responses to the cancer. Changes in peripheral-blood immune cells observed. Increases in antibody responses to other antigens after radiotherapy. | Postow et al. ( | 2012 |
| External beam radiotherapy with intratumoral injection of dendritic cells | Soft Tissue Sarcoma in neoadjuvant setting | 9 of 17 patients developed tumor-specific immune responses (11–42 weeks). 12 of 17 patients were progression free after 1 year. Treatment caused a dramatic accumulation of T-cells in the tumor. | Finkelstein et al ( | 2012 |
| Phase II: | Low-grade B-cell lymphoma | 5 of 15 patients had a complete response. Immunized sites showed a significant reduction of CD25(+), Foxp3(+) T-cells and a similar reduction in S100(+), CD1a(+) dendritic cells. | Kim et al. ( | 2012 |
| Phase I: stereotactic body radiotherapy and IL-2 | Metastatic melanoma or renal cell carcinoma | 8 of 12 patients achieved a complete or partial response. 5 of 7 melanoma patients had a complete or partial response. Greater frequency of proliferating CD4(+) T-cells in responding patients. | Seung et al. ( | 2012 |
| Phase II: abscopal effect of anti-CTLA-4 therapy alone | Melanoma with brain metastases | 14 out of 72 had a complete response in brain metastases. 15 out of 72 patients exhibited disease control outside of the brain. Anti-CTLA-4 was effective in small and asymptomatic metastases. | Margolin et al. ( | 2012 |
| Abscopal effect associated with a systemic anti-melanoma immune response | Metastatic melanoma | Serology showed anti-MAGEA3 antibodies, documenting an association between the abscopal effect and a systemic antitumor immune response. The patient experienced a complete remission and resolution of nodal metastases. | Stamell et al. ( | 2013 |
| Phase II: | Low-grade B-cell lymphoma | 1 of 15 patients had a complete response. 3 of 15 had partial responses. Some tumors induced a suppressive, regulatory phenotype in autologous T-cells | Brody et al. ( | 2010 |
| Phase I: Coley’s toxins trial | Metastatic bladder cancer | The toxins were effective at inducing fever and robust surges in cytokines. Patient had a 50% reduction in his cancer. | Karbach et al. ( | 2012 |
| Phase II: cancer vaccine with radiotherapy in prostate cancer | Local prostate cancer | 13 of 17 patients had increases in PSA-specific T cells of at least 3-fold vs. no detectable increases in the radiotherapy-only arm ( Indirect evidence of immune-mediated tumor killing was evident. | Gulley et al. ( | 2005 |
| Phase I: radiotherapy and intratumoral adoptive dendritic cell immunotherapy | Refractory hepatocellular carcinoma | 10/12 patients had completed immunologic response. AFP-specific immune response in 8/12 patients. l6/12 patients showed increased NK cell cytotoxic activity post vaccination. | Chi et al. ( | 2005 |
Results of clinical trials measuring the abscopal effect of radiotherapy combined with either immunotherapy, Coley’s toxins, or cancer vaccines—in the last decade. All 15 clinical trials produced positive results, verifying that regression of distant metastases is possible with destruction of the primary tumor after immune checkpoint blockade. We believe substituting radiation with cryoablation therapy would result in a more robust immune response and with a better safety profile for patients (.
Figure 3Recent history of cryosurgery and immunotherapy R&D. Vaccines are the only mechanism in which entire species of genome have been eradicated from the human population (smallpox, chickenpox, measles virus). Presently, cancer vaccines like Gardasil 9® can reduce the number of cervical, and likely oral cancers observed through the protection from 9 types of inciting human papilloma viruses. True cancer vaccines, such as Canvaxin™ (2004), have been produced and investigated but most have yielded underwhelming results in creating an effective highly targeted tumor antigen which would likely kill a pure monoclonal or homogenous tumor yet fails in a heterogenous population of cancer cells. Many of the highly specific vaccines developed for melanoma, glioblastomas, and colon cancer have been ineffective or weakly effective; however, now when combined with cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein (CTLA-4) and PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors, are becoming more effective and garnering more clinical investigation. The addition of checkpoint inhibitors to potentiate these more advanced cancer vaccines does appear to yield impressive outcomes but still with lower than desired effects.