| Literature DB >> 31226866 |
Jihane Boustani1, Mathieu Grapin2, Pierre-Antoine Laurent3, Lionel Apetoh4, Céline Mirjolet5,6.
Abstract
Historically, the 4Rs and then the 5Rs of radiobiology explained the effect of radiation therapy (RT) fractionation on the treatment efficacy. These 5Rs are: Repair, Redistribution, Reoxygenation, Repopulation and, more recently, intrinsic Radiosensitivity. Advances in radiobiology have demonstrated that RT is able to modify the tumor micro environment (TME) and to induce a local and systemic (abscopal effect) immune response. Conversely, RT is able to increase some immunosuppressive barriers, which can lead to tumor radioresistance. Fractionation and dose can affect the immunomodulatory properties of RT. Here, we review how fractionation, dose and timing shape the RT-induced anti-tumor immune response and the therapeutic effect of RT. We discuss how immunomodulators targeting immune checkpoint inhibitors and the cGAS/STING (cyclic GMP-AMP Synthase/Stimulator of Interferon Genes) pathway can be successfully combined with RT. We then review current trials evaluating the RT/Immunotherapy combination efficacy and suggest new innovative associations of RT with immunotherapies currently used in clinic or in development with strategic schedule administration (fractionation, dose, and timing) to reverse immune-related radioresistance. Overall, our work will present the existing evidence supporting the claim that the reactivation of the anti-tumor immune response can be regarded as the 6th R of Radiobiology.Entities:
Keywords: immune response; radiotherapy fractionation; radiotherapy-immunotherapy association
Year: 2019 PMID: 31226866 PMCID: PMC6627091 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11060860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1The reactivation of the immune response: the new R of radiobiology.
Figure 2Radiotherapy in dependence of the fractionation schedule recruits different type of immune cells and can modulate the immunotherapy target expression. (Treg: regulatory T Cell; MDSC: Myeloid-derived suppressor cells; PD-L1: Programmed-Death Ligand 1; TIGIT: T-Cell immunoreceptor with Ig and ITIM domain; DNA: Desoxyribonucleic Acid; RT: Radiotherapy; T-REX: Three-Prime Repair Exonuclease). These results spring from Vanpouille-Box et al., Nature Com, 2017 and Grapin et al., JITC, in press.
Figure 3According to the immune response induced by three types of fractionation schedules, we suggest optimized radio-chemo-immunotherapy protocols.