| Literature DB >> 31111237 |
B M Aarts1,2, E G Klompenhouwer3, S L Rice3,4, F Imani3, T Baetens3, A Bex5, S Horenblas5, M Kok6, J B A G Haanen6, R G H Beets-Tan3,7, F M Gómez3,8.
Abstract
Cancer cells can escape the immune system by different mechanisms. The evasion of cancer cells from immune surveillance is prevented by immune checkpoint inhibitors, allowing the patient's own immune system to attack their cancer. Immune checkpoint inhibitors have shown improvement in overall survival for melanoma, lung cancer and renal cell carcinoma in clinical trials. Unfortunately, not all patients respond to this therapy.In cancer management, percutaneous ablation techniques are well established for both cure and local control of many tumour types. Cryoablation of the tumour tissue results in cell destruction by freezing. Contrary to heat-based ablative modalities, cryoablation induces tumour cell death by osmosis and necrosis. It is hypothesised that with necrosis, the intracellular contents of the cancer cells stay intact allowing the immune system to induce an immune-specific reaction. This immune-specific reaction can, in theory, also affect cancer cells outside the ablated tissue, known as the abscopal effect. Unfortunately, this effect is rarely observed, but when cryoablation is combined with immunotherapy, the effect of both therapies may be enhanced. Although several preclinical studies demonstrated a synergistic effect between cryoablation and immunotherapy, prospective clinical trials are needed to prove this clinical benefit for patients. In this review, we will outline the current evidence for the combination of cryoablation with immunotherapy to treat cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Cryoablation; Immune checkpoint inhibitor; Immunotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31111237 PMCID: PMC6527672 DOI: 10.1186/s13244-019-0727-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insights Imaging ISSN: 1869-4101
Fig. 1Cryoablation of a patient with stage IA renal cell carcinoma. The hypodense area around the needle corresponds with the generated ice ball in real time
Fig. 2One of the hypotheses of how cryoablation induces an immune response is in the way cell death is induced. Cryoablation induces cell death by both necrosis and apoptosis. Necrosis releases intra-cellular contents stimulating signals (among others danger signals) that may activate T cells for a specific immune response to the cryoablated tissue. Contrary, after cell death by apoptosis, only apoptotic bodies are released, without stimulating signals. Without these stimulating signals, T cells are not being activated. Therefore, apoptosis may lead to an immune-suppressing signal
Fig. 3For T cell activation, both stimulatory signal 1 and 2 are needed. Signal 1 consists of the interaction between the major histocompatibility complex on the dendritic cell and the T cell receptor. Different combinations of interactions are possible for signal 2. One inhibiting signal 2 is the interaction between programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1) on T cell and programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) on tumour cells or antigen presenting cells. a T cell activation is blocked by an inhibiting signal 2 between PD-L1 and PD-1 receptor binding. b When an anti-PD1 antibody is used, the inhibiting signal of the T cell is blocked whereby an activation signal of the T cell is gathered and the T cell is activated
Summary of the major therapies with their mode of action used in combination with cryoablation in the reviewed papers. All therapies stimulate the immune system in a way and in combination with cryoablation an enhancement of this effect is hypothesized
| Therapy | Mode of action | Number of articles |
|---|---|---|
| CpG oligonucleotide (CpG ODN) | Is recognized by dendritic cells (DCs) and B cells. Activates T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, monocytes, neutrophils and plasma cell differentiation | 8 |
| Anti-cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (anti CTLA-4) | Blocks the inhibitory receptor (CTLA-4) on the T cell and therefore activates the T cell for a specific immune response | 6 |
| Immature dendritic cells (DCs) | Phagocytosis of pathogens; antigen-presentation to other immune cells (among others T cells) | 4 |
| Natural killer (NK) cell therapy | Infusion with autologous NK cells to directly destroy tumour cells | 4 |
| Dendritic cell- cytokine induced killer (DC-CIK) | May act similarly to T cells or NK cells but is unrestricted to major histocompatibility complex | 3 |
| Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) | A protein that functions as a cytokine and stimulates stem cells and can induce an immune cascade | 3 |
| Anti-programmed death-ligand 1 (PDL-1) | Blocks the receptor programmed death 1 on the tumour cell. This results in the activation of the T cell to induce a specific immune response | 1 |
Overview of the most studied factors of cryoablation and the immune system in the reviewed papers
| Most studied factors of cryoablation and the immune system | ||
|---|---|---|
| Mice | Total of 28 articles | |
| Survival | ↑ | 17/17 |
| Rechallenge of primary tumour | ↑ | 12/12 |
| Reduction in distant metastasis | ↑ | 10/10 |
| Cytokine release | ↑ | 16/17 |
| IFN-y release | ↑ | 16/17 |
| TNFα release | ↑ | 4/5 |
| IL-4 | ↑ | 1/7 |
| IL-10 | ↑ | 1/4 |
| Th1/Th2 cytokine ratio | ↑ | 10/0 |
| CD4+ infiltration | ↑ | 12/16 |
| CD8+ infiltration | ↑ | 14/19 |
| Treg | ↓ | 5/6 |
| NK cells | ↑ | 3/4 |
| Human | Total of 17 articles | |
| Survival | ↑ | 8/8 |
| Quality of Life | ↑ | 4/4 |
| Cytokine release | ↑ | 6/7 |
| IFN-y release | ↑ | 6/7 |
| TNFβ release | ↑ | 3/4 |
| IL-10 | ↓ | 3/5 |
| IL-4 | ↓ | 3/4 |
| IL-2 | ↑ | 3/5 |
| Th1/Th2 cytokine ratio | ↑ | 5/0 |
| CD4+ infiltration | ↑ | 5/8 |
| CD8+ infiltration | ↑ | 5/8 |
| Treg | ↓ | 2/2 |
| NK cells | ↑ | 4/4 |
Overview of clinical trials of cryoablation and immunotherapy
| Cancer type | Tumour stage | Study phase | Study design | Therapy | End points | End date | Centre | Identifier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Early/resectable disease | Pilot | Open label single arm | Pre-operative ipilimumab + nivolumab + cryoablation | Safety: number of adverse events, no secondary end points. | June 2019 | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, USA | NCT02833233 |
| Resectable disease | II | Prospective randomized parallel interventional | Peri-operative cryoablation, ipilimumab nivolumab vs pre-operative care | Distant disease-free survival* | May 2021 | Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, USA | NTC03546686 | |
| Renal cell carcinoma | Metastatic disease | I | Open label single arm | Tremelimumab +/− cryoablation before surgery | Objective response rate by irRC* | March 2021 | MD Anderson, USA | NCT02626130 |
| Stage I | – | Prospective observational cohort | Immune response of cryoablation vs RFA vs LPN | Immune response: number of leucocytes in tissue samples post ablation. | June 2019 | UC Irvine, USA | NCT03409224 | |
| Prostate cancer | Localized disease | Basic science | Open label single arm | Immune response profile after total cryotherapy, focal cryotherapy, SBRT and radical prostatectomy | Evaluate change in blood cytokine profile | Sept 2019 | Winthrop University Hospital, USA | NCT03331367 |
| Metastatic disease | II | Open label single arm | Pembrolizumab and cryosurgery in combination with short term androgen ablation | Proportion of men with PSA < 0.6 ng/mL PD-1/PDL-1 expression | Nov 2018 | Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, USA | NCT02489357 | |
| Stage I tm IIB | I | Prospective randomized open label clinical trial | GM-CSF after cryoablation | Change in B cell, T cells and PSA levels | Dec 2018 | University of Colorado Cancer Center, USA | NCT02250014 | |
| Castration resistant disease with positive lymph nodes | I | Open label single arm | Cryoablation plus intratumoural immature dendritic cells | Maximum tolerated dose* | April 2019 | Haukeland University Hospital, Norwegian | NCT02423928 | |
| Lung cancer | Stage IV | II | Open label single arm | Core needle biopsy and cryoablation added to continued treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitor | Response by RECIST* | March 2025 | Massachusetts General Hospital, USA | NCT03290677 |
| Melanoma | Stage III tm IV cutaneous melanoma | I + II | Open label single arm | Dendritic cell therapy after cryosurgery in combination with pembrolizumab | Response by RECIST Clinical benefit* | Oct 2022 | Mayo Clinic, USA | NCT03325101 |
Stage IV, HLA-A2 + no curative disease | I | Open label single arm | Radiofrequency therapy + RFA/CA+ GM-CSF injection | Level of immune response by heat shock protein and lymphocyte Response by RECIST* | May 2018 | Mayo Clinic, USA | NCT00568763 | |
| Other | Metastatic Colorectal cancer | I/IIb | Open label single arm | Combining cryoablation with intra-lesional immunotherapy with AlloStim® with dose escalation | Safety of increased frequency of dosing* Tumour response RECIST and histopathology HRQoL | Feb 2018 | MD Anderson Medical Center, USA | NCT02380443 NB this study was first designed in BC |
| Palliative stetting of HCC or BTC | I/II | Open label single arm | Tremelimumab and durvalumab + RFA/CA/TACE | PFS* | Apr 2021 | National institutes of health clinical centre, USA | NCT02821754 | |
| Palliative stetting of HCC or BTC stage B and C | I | Clinical prospective non-randomised | Tremelimumab + RFA/CA/SBRT/TACE | Response Rate Time to tumour progression Overall survival* | Dec 2018 | National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, USA | NCT01853618 | |
| Other | Non-Hodgkin lymphoma | I/II | Open label single arm | Intratumoral DC therapy after cryosurgery and pembrolizumab | Maximum tolerated dose* Complete responses Disease free survival rate Duration of response OS, PFS, HRQoL | Feb 2021 | Mayo Clinic, USA | NCT03035331 |
1. Oesophageal cancer, 2. Tongue cancer, 3. Ovarian cancer, 4. Laryngeal cancer, 5. Pharyngeal cancer, 6. Cervical cancer 7. Tumours in transplanted livers 8. Sarcoma | I/II | Open label single arm trial | Cryoablation and NK cell immunotherapy | Response, PFS, OS by RECIST* | Jul 2019 | Cancer Institute in Fuda Cancer Hospital, China | NCT02843581 NCT02849379 NCT02849353 NCT02849314 NCT02849327 NCT02849340 NCT02849015 NCT02849366 | |
1. Breast cancer, 2. Liver cancer, 3. Lung cancer, 4. Gastric cancer, 5. Colorectal cancer, 6. Pancreatic cancer 7. Kidney cancer | II | Prospective randomized triple arm study | Activated CIK cells + anti-bispecific antibody with or without cryoablation vs conventional therapy | Objective response rate PFS TTP* | April 2021 | Fuda Cancer Hospital, China | NTC03524261 NTC03484962 NTC03501056 NTC03554395 NTC03524274 NTC03509298 NTC03540199 |
RECIST response evaluation criteria in solid tumours, irRC immune-related response criteria, PFS progression-free survival, OS overall survival, CR complete response, PR partial response, HRQoL health-related quality of life, DSS disease specific survival, LHRH agonist luteinizing-hormone releasing-hormone agonist, TTP time tumour progression, RFA radiofrequency ablation, CA cryoablation, SBRT stereotactic body radiotherapy, DC dendritic cell, CIK cytokine-induced killer cells, NK natural killer, TACE transarterial chemo-embolisation, GM-CSF granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, LPN laparoscopic partial nephrectomy, PSA prostate specific antigen, PD-1 programmed cell death protein, PDL-1 programmed cell death ligand
*Safety has been performed in all studies by number of adverse events