| Literature DB >> 31637474 |
Vered Domankevich1, Adi Cohen1, Margalit Efrati1, Michael Schmidt2,3, Hans-Georg Rammensee4, Sujit S Nair5, Ashutosh Tewari5, Itzhak Kelson2,3, Yona Keisari6,7.
Abstract
Diffusing alpha-emitters radiation therapy (DaRT) is the only known method for treating solid tumors with highly destructive alpha radiation. More importantly, as a monotherapy, DaRT has been shown to induce a systemic antitumor immune response following tumor ablation. Here, immunomodulatory strategies to boost the antitumor immune response induced by DaRT, and the response specificity, were investigated in the colon cancer CT26 mouse model. Local treatment prior to DaRT, with the TLR3 agonist poly I:C, was sufficient to inhibit tumor growth relative to poly I:C or DaRT alone. DaRT used in combination with the TLR9 agonist CpG, or with the TLR1/2 agonist XS15 retarded tumor growth and increased tumor-rejection rates, compared to DaRT alone, curing 41% and 20% of the mice, respectively. DaRT in combination with CpG, the Treg inhibitor cyclophosphamide, and the MDSC inhibitor sildenafil, cured 51% of the animals, compared to only 6% and 0% cure when immunomodulation or DaRT was used alone, respectively. Challenge and Winn assays revealed that these high cure rates involved a specific immunological memory against CT26 antigens. We suggest that DaRT acts in synergy with immunomodulation to induce a specific and systemic antitumor immune response. This strategy may serve as a safe and efficient method not only for tumor ablation, but also for in situ vaccination of cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: CpG; MDSC; Poly I:C; Treg; Tumor ablation; XS15
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31637474 PMCID: PMC6877484 DOI: 10.1007/s00262-019-02418-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Immunother ISSN: 0340-7004 Impact factor: 6.968
Fig. 1CT26 tumor development following DaRT + TLR3 agonist. a Experimental scheme. CT26-bearing mice were treated with either a 40 kBq DaRT seed or inert seed; 72 and 24 h prior to seed insertion, an intratumoral (i.t.) injection of 10 µg/30 µl poly I:C or PBS was given. b Tumor growth curve. DaRT + poly I:C reduced tumor growth compared to all other groups. p < 0.05 for DaRT + poly I:C vs. control on days 3, 13 and 14, vs. DaRT alone on days 4–8, and vs. poly I:C alone on days 3, 8–10, 12, 13
Fig. 2CT26 tumor rejection following DaRT combined with TLR9/TLR1,2 agonists. a Experimental scheme. CT26-bearing mice were treated with a 40–50 kBq DaRT seed in combination with CpG or XS15. For XS15 treatment, a 40 µg/50 µl peritumoral (p.t.) injection was given once a week for 3 weeks (three injections, first treatment on the day of DaRT insertion). For CpG treatment, a 100 µg/30 µl p.t. injection was given immediately prior to DaRT insertion and 20 µg/10 µl was administered intranasally (i.n.) three times thereafter, every 2 days. b Percent of tumor-bearing mice. pχ2 test < 0.05 for DaRT vs. DaRT + CpG. The presented results are based on cumulative data from two different experiments
Fig. 3CT26 tumor rejection following DaRT combined with TLR9 agonist and MDSC/Treg inhibitors. a Schematic representation of the treatment protocol combining DaRT with immunomodulators. Mice were inoculated with 5 × 105 CT26 cells. When tumor maximal length reached 7–8 mm (10–14 days after inoculation), a single 7-mm 60 kBq DaRT seed, or an inert seed, was inserted into the tumor. Four days prior to DaRT, systemic treatment with sildenafil was begun (0.33 mg/ml in the drinking water, daily for 6 weeks). An i.p. injection of 125 mg/kg CP was given 1 day before DaRT and 1 week after DaRT. On the day of DaRT treatment, 100 µg/30 µl CpG were administered peritumorally (p.t.) and three doses of 20 µg/10 µl CpG were given intranasally (i.n.) every 2 days starting from day 3 after DaRT. b Percent tumor-bearing mice during 3 months of follow-up. pχ2 test < 0.005 for DaRT combined with the three immunomodulators vs. all other groups. The presented results are based on cumulative data from three different experiments
Fig. 4Rechallenge tumor development in CT26-bearing mice treated with DaRT vs. inert seed combined with immunomodulators. Mice were inoculated with 5 × 105 CT26 tumor cells and then treated with DaRT or inert seeds combined with immunomodulators CpG, CP, and sildenafil. Cured mice or tumor-resected mice were rechallenged ~ 4 months after DaRT with 5 × 106 CT26 tumor cells
Resistance to challenge of mice cured by DaRT + immunomodulators and specific protection of naïve mice treated with mouse splenocytes
| Challenge assay | Mouse source | Challenge cell line | Number of tumor-bearing mice | Tumor development (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cured by DaRT + CP + CpG + sildenafil | CT26 | 10 | 0 | 0 | |
| Naïve | CT26 | 10 | 10 | 100 | |
| Cured by DaRT + CP + CpG + sildenafil | DA3 | 8 | 8 | 100 | |
| Naïve | DA3 | 10 | 10 | 100 |
Mice that were cured by DaRT, sildenafil, low-dose CP and CpG (n = 18) and naïve mice (n = 20) were inoculated with 5 × 105 CT26 or DA3 cells (Challenge assay). Percent of animals that developed tumors following challenge is presented. Naïve mice were injected intradermally with splenocytes from either naïve or CT26-bearing mice treated by DaRT and immunomodulators, coupled with CT26 or DA3 tumor cells in the relation of 45 Ly:1 TC (Winn assay). Percent of tumor development is presented. The presented results are based on cumulative data from two different experiments