| Literature DB >> 29866197 |
Jun Gong1, Thang Q Le2, Erminia Massarelli1, Andrew E Hendifar3, Richard Tuli4.
Abstract
Several inhibitors of programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) and programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) have been approved as a form of immunotherapy for multiple cancers. Ionizing radiation therapy (RT) has been shown to enhance the priming and effector phases of the antitumor T-cell response rendering it an attractive therapy to combine with PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors. Preclinical data support the rational combination of the 2 modalities and has paved way for the clinical development of the combination across a spectrum of cancers. In this review, we highlight the preclinical and clinical development of combined RT and PD-1/PD-L1 blockade to date. In addition to a comprehensive evaluation of available safety and efficacy data, we discuss important points of consideration in clinical trial design for this promising combination.Entities:
Keywords: Antitumor; Checkpoint inhibitor; Clinical trials; Immune response; PD-1; PD-L1; Preclinical; Radiation therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29866197 PMCID: PMC5987486 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0361-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Proposed mechanisms of synergy between RT and PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors. Emerging evidence demonstrates that immune modulation from PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors and RT through nonredundant pathways contributes to synergistic antitumor activity, thereby forming the basis for the rationale combination of the two modalities. RT, radiation therapy; PD-1, programmed cell death 1 receptor; PD-L1, programmed death ligand 1; IFN-γ, interferon-γ; cGAS, cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP) synthase; STING, stimulator of interferon genes; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; TCR, T-cell receptor; TILs, tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, Tregs; regulatory T cells; MDSCs, myeloid-derived suppressor cells
Preclinical studies demonstrating antitumor activity of combined radiation therapy and PD-1/PD-L1 blockade
| Cell line | Experimental model | RT dose | PD-1/PD-L1 dose | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B16-D5 (melanoma) | Mice subcutaneous | TBI 600 cGy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 20 mg/kg IP starting on day 4 then every 3–4 days +1X106 gp100 or OVA257–264 pulsed dendritic cell vaccine SC on day 4 and 11 ± 1X107 pmel T-cells (adoptive transfer) IV on day 4 after inoculation | [ |
| AT.3 (triple-negative mammary) | Mice xenograft | 12 Gy (1 fraction) or 4–5 Gy (4 fractions) | PD-1 mAb 100 μg + CD137 mAb 100 μg IP on days 0, 4, 8, and 12 of RT | [ |
| GL261 (glioma) | Mice xenograft | 10 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-1 mAb 10 mg/kg IP on days 10, 12, and 14 of RT | [ |
| B16-SIY (melanoma) TUBO (mammary) | Mice subcutaneous | 25 Gy (2 fractions) 15 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 200 μg IP every 3 days for 4 doses starting 3 weeks after RT | [ |
| 5 T33 (myeloma) | Mice intravenous | TBI 500 cGy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 200 μg IP on days 12, 14, 17, 19, 21, 26, and 28 after inoculation | [ |
| 5 T33 (myeloma) | Mice intravenous | TBI 1100 cGy (1 fraction) | HSCT on day 0 + PD-L1 mAb 200 μg IP on days 3, 5, 10, 12, 17, and 19 after HSCT ± vaccine (irradiated 5 T33 cells or 5 T33 cells transfected with empty vectors) on days 3, 10, and 17 after HSCT | [ |
| 5 T33 (myeloma) | Mice intravenous | TBI 500 cGy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 200 μg IP on days 12, 14, 17, 19, 21, 26, and 28 after inoculation ± LAG-3, TIM-3, or CTLA-4 mAbs 200 μg IP on same days | [ |
| CT26 (colon 4434 ( | Mice subcutaneous | 10 Gy (5 fractions) | PD-1 or PD-L1 mAb 10 mg/kg IP 3 times weekly up to 3 weeks starting on day 1 of RT | [ |
| TUBO (mammary) | Mice subcutaneous | 12 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 200 μg IP every 3 days for 4 doses starting on day 0 or 1 of RT | [ |
| TSA (mammary) | Mice subcutaneous | 24 Gy (3 fractions) | PD-1 mAb (dose NR) starting on day 15 after inoculation and every 4 days thereafter | [ |
| B16-OVA (melanoma) | Mice subcutaneous | 15 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-1 mAb 10 mg/kg ± CTLA-4 mAb 10 mg/kg IP on days 7, 9, 11, 14, and 16 following tumor cell inoculation | [ |
| B16-OVA (melanoma) | Mice subcutaneous | 12 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-1 mAb 200 μg IP every 3 days for 3 doses starting 1 day prior to RT | [ |
| PyMT (mammary) | Mice subcutaneous | 12 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-1 mAb dose NR + single dose of CTLA-4 mAb (dose NR) 3 days prior to PD-1 and RT | [ |
| B16-F10 (melanoma) | Mice subcutaneous | 20 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 200 μg + CTLA-4 mAb 200 μg IP every 3 days for 3 doses starting 5 or 9 days after inoculation | [ |
| Meer (head and neck squamous) | Mice subcutaneous | 1, 6, 10 Gy fractions | PD-L1 antibody dose NR | [ |
| Adeno-Cre viral vector (lung) | GEMM intrathoracic injection | 8.5 Gy twice daily over 2 days | PD-1 mAb 200 μg IP 3 times weekly starting 6 h after second RT dose | [ |
| MB49 (bladder) | Mice xenograft | 12 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 250 μg IP twice weekly for 4 doses starting 1 day prior to RT | [ |
| MC38 (colon | Mice subcutaneous | 24 Gy (3 fractions) | PD-1 mAb ± CD137 mAb 5–10 mg/kg IP on days 13, 15, and 17 after inoculation | [ |
| 4-hydroxytamoxifen induction ( | GEMM topical induction | 14 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-1 + CD137 or PD-1 + CTLA-4 mAb 100 μg IP twice weekly for 4 doses on day 1 of RT | [ |
| 344SQ (lung) | Mice subcutaneous | 36 Gy (3 fractions) | PD-1 mAb 10 mg/kg IP starting on day 1 of RT and continued for additional 3–4 doses | [ |
| ARK (esophageal squamous) | Mice subcutaneous | 20 Gy (10 fractions) | PD-1 mAb (dose NR) starting 2 days before RT and every 3 days thereafter ± carboplatin and paclitaxel IP (dose NR) on day 1 of RT and every 3 fractions | [ |
| GL261 (glioma) | Mice xenograft | 10 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-1 mAb 200 μg IP on days 10, 12, and 14 of RT ± TIM-3 mAb 250 μg IP days 7, 11, and 15 of RT | [ |
| CT26 (colon 4434 ( | Mice subcutaneous | 10 Gy (5 fractions) | PD-1 or PD-L1 mAb 10 mg/kg IP 3 times weekly for 1 week starting on day 1 of RT | [ |
| TSA (mammary) | Mice subcutaneous | 24 Gy (3 fractions) on days 12, 13 and 14 after inoculation | PD-1 mAb 200 μg IP on days 12, 15, 19, 22 and 26 after inoculation | [ |
| Hep-55.1c (hepatocellular) | Mice orthotopic | 30 Gy (3 fractions) | PD-1 mAb 250 μg IP on days 7, 14, and 21 after inoculation | [ |
| KPC and Pan02 (pancreatic) | Mice subcutaneous | 6, 12, or 20 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 10 mg/kg IP on days 4, 7, 10, and 13 after inoculation + gemcitabine 100 mg/kg IP on days 0 and 3 of inoculation | [ |
| HCa-1 (hepatocellular) | Mice intramuscular | 10 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 10 mg/kg IP every 3 days for 4 doses starting on day 1 of RT | [ |
| LM8 (osteosarcoma) | Mice subcutaneous | 10 Gy (1 fraction) | PD-L1 mAb 150 μg + CTLA-4 mAb 150 μg IP every 3 days for 3 doses starting on days 9, 12, and 15 after inoculation | [ |
| CT26 (colon | Mice intradermal | RFA 17-gauge single ablation electrode for 3.5–4.5 min at target temperature of 70 degrees C | PD-1 mAb 200 μg IP every 3 days for 4 doses | [ |
RT radiation therapy, TBI total body irradiation, cGy centigray mAb monoclonal antibody, IP intraperitoneal, SC subcutaneous, IV intravenous, Gy Gray, HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, LAG-3 lymphocyte-activation gene 3, TIM-3 T-cell immunoglobulin mucin-3, NR not reported, GEMM genetically engineered mouse model, RFA radiofrequency ablation
Retrospective clinical studies with available results on the antitumor activity of combined radiation therapy and PD-1/PD-L1 blockade
| Study | n | Design | Outcomes | Toxicities | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RS | 26 | Melanoma BMs treated with SRS or FSRT (16–30 Gy X 1–5 fractions) within 6 mo of nivolumab (1, 3, or 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks for 12 doses then every 12 weeks for 8 doses) | Median OS 11.8 mo (range 0.5–33.9) and 1-year OS 55% in unresected BMs; median OS not reached and 1-year OS 100% in resected BMs | 1 grade 2 headache relieved with steroids | [ |
| RS | 96 | Melanoma BMs treated with SRS (majority 24 Gy X 1 fraction) within 3 mo of nivolumab 3 mg/kg every 2 weeks, pembrolizumab 2 mg/kg every 3 weeks, or other systemic therapies | 6- and 12-mo distant BM control rate 61%/38% anti-PD-1, 26%/21% anti-CTLA-4, 53%/20% BRAF/MEK inhibitor, 15%/5% chemotherapy ( | For anti-PD-1 therapy: 1 grade 2 headache managed with steroids | [ |
| RS | 24 | Melanoma and NSCLC BMs treated with SRS (median 20 Gy/fraction, IQR 16–21) within median 19 weeks (range 0–107) of nivolumab or pembrolizumab (median 5 cycles, IQR 3–6) | 6- and 12-mo OS 85 and 78%; median OS not reached; 6- and 12-mo distant brain progression rate 37 and 65% | 2 patients grade ≥ 3 CNS toxicity: 1 seizure and 1 symptomatic radionecrosis requiring surgery | [ |
| RS | 53 | Metastatic melanoma treated with extracranial RT/intracranial SRS (8–30 Gy X 1–10 fractions) or WBRT (median 30 Gy X10 fractions) and pembrolizumab 2 mg/kg every 3 weeks or nivolumab 3 mg/kg every 2 weeks as concurrent, sequential, or salvage (following progression on anti-PD-1 therapy) therapy | Medians OS 6.4 vs. 8.6 mo ( | For RT arm: 3 patients grade ≥ 3 rash, 1 grade ≥ 3 diarrhea, 2 grade ≥ 3 radiation dermatitis, 1 grade ≥ 3 radionecrosis; for WBRT arm: 1 grade ≥ 3 nausea, 1 grade ≥ 3 cognitive changes, 2 grade ≥ 3 rash | [ |
| RS | 75 | Melanoma BMs treated with SRS (median 20 Gy, range 12–24 Gy) within ±4 weeks (concurrent) of pembrolizumab 2 or 10 mg/kg every 2–3 weeks or nivolumab 3 mg/kg every 2–3 weeks or ipilimumab | Median % lesion volume reduction at 3 mo (− 83.0% vs. -52.8%, | NR | [ |
| RS | 21 | Metastatic NSCLC treated with RT (8–30 Gy X 1–10 fractions) while receiving anti-PD-1, anti-PD-L1, and/or anti-CTLA-4, or other immune therapy | 6- and 12-mo local control rates 91.7 and 85.2%; median time to systemic progression 2.3 mo (95% CI 1.0–4.5); median OS 7.2 mo (95% CI 4.2–11.1) | 1 grade 4 cerebral edema (WBRT) and 1 grade 3 pneumonitis | [ |
| RS | 25 | Unresectable melanoma treated with hypofractionated RT (1 weekly fraction over 4–5 weeks (84%) or 1 gammaknife RT for BMs (16%)) within 3 mo of anti-PD-1 (early) or > 3 mo after anti-PD-1 therapy (late) | CR, PR, SD, and PD rates for radiated sites 24, 8, 44, and 28% and for nonirradiated sites 29, 19, 19, and 33%, respectively; abscopal responses (CR or PR) in 56% for addition of late RT | No unusual AEs reported | [ |
| RS | 15 | Metastatic melanoma, RCC, NSCLC treated with palliative RT (total 8–36 Gy via 3–8 Gy fractions) within ±75 days of PD-1 inhibitor | Safety analysis | All-grade immune-related AEs in 3 patients (20%) and 1 RT-related AE (7%) of moderate mucositis; no cases of pneumonitis | [ |
| RS | 84 | Metastatic melanoma, NSCLC, and other solid tumors treated with thoracic RT (median total dose 3000 cGy (range 600–7400 X 10 fractions) within 1 month (concurrent) or up 6 months (sequential) of PD-1/PD-L1 and/or CTLA-4 blockade | No significant differences in toxicity rates between PD-1/PD-L1 and CTLA-4 inhibitors or concurrent and sequential treatment | For all-grade AEs: 6 patients with pneumonitis (7.2%, 1 grade ≥ 3); for grade ≥ 2 AEs: 14 fatigue, 9 rash, 10 GI toxicities, 12 infections, 8 thyroid dysfunction, 7 renal injury, and 9 other | [ |
| RS | 29 | Metastatic NSCLC treated with thoracic RT (10–70 Gy X 1–35 fractions) within 6 mo of PD-1/PD-L1 and/or CTLA-4 blockade | Median PFS and OS of 3.8 mo (95% CI 1.9–8) and 9.2 mo (95% CI 5.1-not reached) | Possible treatment-related AEs: 1 grade 5 pneumonitis and 2 grade 3 pneumonitis | [ |
| RS | 133 | Metastatic NSCLC, melanoma, and RCC treated with palliative RT (8–37.5 Gy X 1–15 fractions) within 180 days of PD-1 or CTLA-4 inhibitor | No significant difference in immune-related AEs between those receiving RT during/after checkpoint inhibitors and before checkpoint inhibitors ( | All-grade immune-related AEs: 20% dermatitis, 8% colitis, 5% transaminitis; grade ≥ 3 immune-related AEs: 4% colitis, 2% transaminitis, 2% hypophysitis | [ |
| RS | 137 | Metastatic NSCLC, melanoma, and RCC treated with WBRT (12–39 Gy), SRS (15–30 Gy), or extracranial RT (8–66 Gy) within a median 85 days (IQR 34–181) of anti-PD-1 therapy | Median OS 249 days (IQR 90–689) following PD-1 blockade; on multivariate analysis HR for death 3.1 (95% CI 1.7–5.9) for NSCLC and HR 3.2 (95% CI 1.2–7.9) for RCC vs. melanoma ( | No grade 4–5 immune-related AEs | [ |
| RS | 17 | NSCLC BMs treated with SRS or FSRT (18–25 Gy X 1–5 fractions) within ±6 mo of nivolumab or durvalumab | Distant brain control rate 57% (RT during or before PD-1/PD-L1 blockade) vs. 0% (RT after, p = 0.05); median OS for SRS during/before PD-1/PD-L1 blockade vs. SRS after (HR 3.6, 95% CI 0.74–26.9, | No neurologic/ cutaneous AEs with SRS and anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy (41% received prophylactic dexamethasone before SRS); 1 patient each discontinued PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor due to colitis and pneumonitis | [ |
| RS | 137 | Melanoma BMs treated with SRS or WBRT (median 20 Gy, range 12–30) within 1 year of PD-1 or CTLA-4 blockade | Median OS 16.9 mo; for radionecrosis: 37 patients (27%); no difference in risk between ipilimumab and pembrolizumab ( | See outcomes | [ |
| RS | 98 | Advanced NSCLC treated with palliative RT any time point before (median 9.5 mo, range 1–106) first cycle of pembrolizumab 2 or 10 mg/kg every 2–3 weeks | Any previous RT vs. no previous RT: median PFS 4.4 mo (95% CI 2.1–8.6) vs. 2.1 mo (95% CI 1.6–2.3, HR 0.56, 95% CI 0.34–0.91, | All-grade treatment-related pulmonary toxicity in 3 patients (13%, with RT) vs. 1 (1% without RT, | [ |
| RS | 108 | Melanoma BMs treated with SRS and/or WBRT (dose NR) within ±6 weeks of various systemic therapies | In combination with RT: median OS 7.5 mo with CTLA-4 (95% CI 4.4–15.6), 20.4 mo PD-1 (95% CI 8.8-NA), and 17.8 mo BRAF ± MEK inhibitor (95% CI 11.8-NA) | 2 radiation necrosis (SRS + anti-PD-1) treated with surgery, steroids, and bevacizumab | [ |
RS retrospective study, BMs brain metastases, SRS stereotactic radiosurgery, FSRT fractionated stereotactic RT, Gy Gray, OS overall survival, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, IQR interquartile range, CNS central nervous system, RT radiotherapy, WBRT whole brain radiation therapy, ORR overall response rate, NR not reported, CI confidence interval, CR complete response, PR partial response, SD stable disease, PD progressive disease, AEs adverse events, RCC renal cell carcinoma, GI gastrointestinal, HR hazard ratio, PFS progression-free survival, NA not applicable
Prospective clinical studies with available results on the antitumor activity of combined radiation therapy and PD-1/PD-L1 blockade
| Study | n | Design | Outcomes | Toxicities | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase I | 4 solid tumors, 1 hematologic malignancy | Atezolizumab 0.01–20 mg/kg every 3 weeks (dose-finding cohort) + local fractionated RT (dose NR) for mixed responses or asymptomatic PD | Stabilization of systemic progression in all 5 patients (PR at systemic site in 1 patient) | Transient grade 1–2 inflammatory AEs (fevers, flu-like symptoms) observed but no DLTs or serious immune-related AEs | [ |
| Phase I | 9 advanced melanoma | Nivolumab 0.3–10 mg/kg every 3 weeks X 21 weeks (induction) then every 12 weeks X 84 weeks (maintenance) ± ipilimumab 3 or 10 mg/kg every 3 weeks X 9 weeks (induction) then every 12 weeks X 84 weeks (maintenance) or combined nivolumab 1 mg/kg and ipilimumab 3 mg/kg every 3 weeks X 12 weeks then nivolumab 3 mg/kg every 2 weeks up to 96 weeks + RT (median 30 Gy X 5 fractions, range 21–37.5 Gy X 1–15 fractions) during induction or maintenance | ORR 44% (4 PRs) as best response by WHO criteria; median OS 27 mo; 1- and 2-year OS rates of 89 and 78%, respectively | 5 patients with non-laboratory grade ≥ 3 AEs, 2 RT-related grade ≥ 3 AEs (intracranial hemorrhage, diarrhea) | [ |
| Phase I/II | 10 unresectable or metastatic solid tumors (≥5% PD-L1 expression) | Durvalumab 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks + local RT (median 20 Gy, range 6–33 X median 5 fractions, range 1–10) given a median of 8.5 days (range 1–35) of last dose of durvalumab | In-field ORR 60% (2/10 CRs, 4/10 PRs); median OS 11.5 mo (95% CI 8.8–13.7); median PSF 6.2 months (95% CI 4.5–12.4); out-of-field 10/14 SD, no responses or abscopal effects were seen | 5 cases of (50%) RT-related grade 2 AEs (3 mucositis, 1 diarrhea, 1 vomiting) | [ |
| Phase I | 24 metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma | SBRT (8 Gy X 1 fraction or 25 Gy X 25 fractions) + durvalumab (dose NR) every 2 weeks or tremelimumab (dose NR) every 4 weeks X 6 doses then every 12 weeks for 3 doses or triple therapy | SD as best ORR in 5 patients (21%) | No DLTs observed; most common AE was grade 1–2 fatigue at dose level 2 | [ |
| Phase II | 10 locally advanced NSCLC | Weekly carboplatin (AUC 2) and weekly paclitaxel 50 mg/m2 + RT 5 days/week for 6–7 weeks (60–66 Gy over 30–33 fractions) followed by atezolizumab 1200 mg every 3 weeks + consolidation carboplatin (AUC 6) and paclitaxel 200 mg/m2 on days 1 and 22 for 2 cycles then atezolizumab alone up to 1 year | Out of 7 patients receiving atezolizumab, 2 patients developed PD after 6 and 8 doses of atezolizumab | 3 patients with potential immune-related AEs (1 grade 3 arthralgia, 1 grade 2 pneumonitis resolved with steroids, 1 grade 3 dyspnea) | [ |
| Phase III | 709 stage III, locally advanced, unresectable NSCLC | 2 or more cycles of platinum-based chemotherapy (defined by local practice) + concurrent definitive RT (54–66 Gy with mean dose to the lung < 20 Gy or volume of lung parenchyma receiving ≥20 Gy < 35%) followed by (within 1–42 days) durvalumab 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks up to 1 year or placebo if no PD during chemoradiation | Median PFS 16.8 months (95% CI 13.0–18.1) vs. 5.6 months (95% CI 4.6–7.8) with placebo (HR 0.52, 95% CI 0.42–0.65, | Grade 3–4 AEs 29.9% vs. 26.1% (placebo); most common grade 3–4 AEs pneumonia (4.4% vs. 3.8%), pneumonitis (3.4% vs. 2.6%), and anemia (2.9% vs. 3.4%) in durvalumab vs. placebo arms | [ |
RT radiation therapy, NR not reported, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, DLT dose-limiting toxicity, AEs adverse events, Gy Gray, ORR overall response rate, PR partial response, WHO World Health Organization, CI confidence interval, SD stable disease, SBRT stereotactic body radiation therapy, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, AUC area under curve, CR complete response, PFS progression-free survival, HR hazard ratio, TTD time to death, NE not estimable or reached