| Literature DB >> 30176921 |
Orneala Bakos1, Christine Lawson1, Samuel Rouleau1, Lee-Hwa Tai2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer surgery is necessary and life-saving. However, the majority of patients develop postoperative recurrence and metastasis, which are the main causes of cancer-related deaths. The postoperative stress response encompasses a broad set of physiological changes that have evolved to safeguard the host following major tissue trauma. These stress responses, however, intersect with cellular mediators and signaling pathways that contribute to cancer proliferation. MAIN: Previous descriptive and emerging mechanistic studies suggest that the surgery-induced prometastatic effect is linked to impairment of both innate and adaptive immunity. Existing studies that combine surgery and immunotherapies have revealed that this combination strategy is not straightforward and patients have experienced both therapeutic benefit and drawbacks. This review will specifically assess the immunological pathways that are disrupted by oncologic surgical stress and provide suggestions for rationally combining cancer surgery with immunotherapies to improve immune and treatment outcomes. SHORTEntities:
Keywords: Perioperative immunotherapy; Perioperative period; Postoperative immunosuppression
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30176921 PMCID: PMC6122574 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0398-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Mechanisms of postoperative immunosuppression. Surgical debulking initiates inflammatory, neuroendocrine and metabolic events, which result in altered cytokine levels (decrease in IL-2, IL-12 and IFN-γ; increase in IL-6/8, IL-10 and TNF-α) and release of growth factors (VEGF - green oval, PDGF - blue oval, TGF-β - pink oval), clotting factors, and stress hormones (catecholamines - yellow circle, prostaglandins - purple circle). While essential for wound healing and pain management, these events lead to the expansion of Tregs, MDSC, and M2 macrophages. Increase in these regulatory immune cells leads to augmented expression of PD-1/CTLA-4, decreased T-cell proliferation, and impaired NK-cell cytotoxicity, resulting in an overall state of immunosuppression. In conjunctions with surgical trauma, other postoperative factors, including sepsis, blood loss, hypothermia, anesthetics, analgesics and anastomotic complications contribute to immunosuppression. Abbreviations: VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; PDGF, platelet-derived growth factor; TGF-β; Transforming growth factor beta; Tregs, regulatory T cells; MDSC, myeloid derived suppressor cells; PD-1, programmed cell death protein 1; CTLA-4, cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated protein 4
Fig. 2Combination strategies of surgery and immunotherapy. The perioperative time-frame provides a therapeutic window, which can be exploited to reduce postoperative immunosuppression and tumor growth. Perioperative use of Propranolol (β-Adrenergic inhibitor) in combination with Etodolac (COX-2 inhibitor) has been shown to reduce pro-metastatic and pro-inflammatory pathways while enhancing expression of NK-cell activation marker CD11a. Perioperative use of oncolytic viruses demonstrates lytic capability towards tumor cells, while restoring and enhancing NK- and T-cell immune cell function postoperatively. Use of PD-1/CTLA-4 inhibitors (with or without combination with microbiota) have also shown promising effects on postoperative T-cell dysfunction. Similar postoperative beneficial immune effects were observed following DC and tumor cell-based vaccines and TLR agonists. Abbreviations: PD-1, programmed cell death protein 1; DC, dendritic cells; COX-2, Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2; CTLA-4, cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated protein 4; TLR, toll like receptor