| Literature DB >> 31905723 |
Julijan Kabiljo1,2, Felix Harpain1,2, Sebastian Carotta3, Michael Bergmann1,2,4.
Abstract
Radiation-induced immunogenic cell death has been described to contribute to the efficacy of external beam radiotherapy in local treatment of solid tumors. It is well established that radiation therapy can induce immunogenic cell death in cancer cells under certain conditions. Initial clinical studies combining radiotherapy with immunotherapies suggest a synergistic potential of this approach. Improving our understanding of how radiation reconditions the tumor immune microenvironment should pave the way for designing rational and robust combinations with immunotherapeutic drugs that enhance both local and systemic anti-cancer immune effects. In this review, we summarize irradiation-induced types of immunogenic cell death and their effects on the tumor microenvironment. We discuss preclinical insights on mechanisms and benefits of combining radiotherapy with immunotherapy, focusing on immune checkpoint inhibitors. In addition, we elaborate how these observations were translated into clinical studies and which parameters may be optimized to achieve best results in future clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: CTLA-4; PD-1; STING; TMEM173; clinical; immune checkpoint inhibitors; immunotherapy; irradiation; radiation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31905723 PMCID: PMC7017108 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12010079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Immunomodulatory consequences of irradiation of tumor cells on dendritic cells and cytotoxic T-cells. Irradiation induces DNA damage, autophagy, and necrosis in the irradiated cells. This leads to stimulation of dendritic cells by danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) mediated by various pathways. Antigen presentation by dendritic cells leads to activation of cytotoxic T-cells which can be blocked by immune checkpoint molecules expressed by tumor cells.
Overview of clinical trials concerning combination of radiotherapy and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) blockade treatment in metastatic melanoma. Clinical trials are sorted primarily by cancer and treatment setting, secondary criteria being chronological. Short descriptions of patient collective, treatment, and outcome are included.
| Trial | Timing of Checkpoint Inhibition | Prospective (Y/N) | Cohort Description | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-CTLA-4, Metastatic Melanoma | |||||
| Knisely et al. 2012 [ | various | N | melanoma brain metastases | 50 patients received various doses of radiotherapy (r), 27 patients received various doses of radiotherapy and ipilimumab before, during or after radiotherapy (i) | median overall survival was 4.1 months (r) and 21.3 months (i) |
| Silk et al. 2013 [ | various | N | melanoma brain metastases | 33 patients received radiation and ipilimumab (i), 37 patients received radiation only (r) | median overall survival was 5.3 months (r) and 18.3 months (i) |
| Barker et al. 2013 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 19 patients received radiotherapy in the first 16 weeks of ipilimumab treatment (e), 11 patients received radiotherapy more than 16 weeks after start of ipilimumab treatment (l) | median overall survival was 9 months (e) and 39 months (l) |
| Twyman-Saint Victor et al. 2014 [ | after | Y | metastatic melanoma, stage M1, mostly M1c (68%) | 22 patients received 2–3 × 6–8 Gy targeted radiotherapy and ipilimumab 3–5 days after the last irradiation | 18% partial response, no complete remission |
| Kiess et al. 2015 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 16 patients received single fraction 15–24 Gy radiation, of these 15 received ipilimumab during (d), 12 before (b) and 19 after (a) radiation | one-year overall survival was 65% (d), 56% (a), and 40% (b) |
| Kropp et al. 2016 [ | after | N | melanoma brain metastases | 16 patients received various doses of radiation and ipilimumab after 15–150 weeks | one-year overall survival was 87% |
| Hiniker et al. 2016 [ | concomitant | Y | metastatic melanoma, stage M1 | 20 patients received 18–50 Gy of radiation divided into fractions ranging from 2.5 to 25 Gy and concomitant ipilimumab injections | 15% partial response, 15% complete remission |
| Qin et al. 2016 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 34 patients received 1–4 treatments of 6–20 Gy irradiation (median dose 16 Gy) and ipilimumab (h), 54 patients received 6–16 treatments of 2.5–3.5 Gy irradiation and ipilimumab (l) | median overall survival was 20 months (h) and 10 months (l), no differences in survival resulting from timing of treatments |
| Skrepnik et al. 2017 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 11 patients received ipilimumab and radiotherapy concurrently, 9 patients received ipilimumab after radiotherapy, 5 patients received ipilimumab before radiotherapy | no significant difference in survival |
| Patel et al. 2017 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 54 patients received 15–21 Gy of radiation, of which 34 received radiation alone (r), 7 received radiation and ipilimumab within 14 days (d), 14 received radiation and ipilimumab after more than 14 days (a) | one-year overall survival was 39% (r), 34% (a), and 42% (d) |
| Cohen-Inbar et al. 2017 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 32 patients received ipilimumab before or during radiation (d), 14 patients received ipilimumab after radiation (a) | Local recurrence-free duration was 19.6 months (d) and 3 months (a) |
| Schmidberger et al. 2018 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 27 patients received multiple doses of 2.5–3 Gy (h), 20 patients received ipilimumab before (b) and 21 after (a) differing types of radiotherapy | median overall survival was 9 months (b + a), 11 months (a), 3 months (b) and 3 months (h) |
Prospective clinical trials exploring ipilimumab with or without radiotherapy in metastatic melanoma.
| Trial | Cohort Description | Treatment Groups | Progressive Disease | Stable Disease | Partial Response | Complete Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hodi et al. 2010 [ | unresectable stage III or IV melanoma | 320 patients received gp100 vaccine and ipilimumab (g + i), 109 patients received ipilimumab (i), 104 patients received gp100 (g) | (g + i) 75% (i) 64% (g) 86% | (g + i) 18% (i) 22% (g) 13% | (g + i) 7% (i) 12% (g) 2% | (g + i) 0.3% (i) 2% (g) 0% |
| Twyman-Saint Victor et al. 2014 [ | metastatic melanoma, stage M1, mostly M1c (68%) | 22 patients received 2–3 × 6–8 Gy targeted radiotherapy and ipilimumab 3–5 days after the last irradiation | 64% | 18% | 18% | 0% |
| Hiniker et al. 2016 [ | metastatic melanoma, stage M1 | 20 patients received 18–50 Gy of radiation divided into fractions ranging from 2.5 to 25 Gy and concomitant ipilimumab injections | 45% | 25% | 15% | 15% |
Overview of clinical trials concerning combination of radiotherapy and anti-PD-1 treatment in various cranial metastatic settings. Clinical trials are sorted primarily by cancer and treatment setting, secondary criteria being chronological. Short descriptions of patient collective, treatment, and outcome are included.
| Trial | Timing of Checkpoint Inhibition | Prospective (Y/N) | Cohort Description | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-PD-1, Brain Metastasis | |||||
| Ahmed et al. 2016 [ | various | N | melanoma brain metastases | 26 patients, receiving nivolumab during (73%) or after (27%) radiotherapy (84% single treatment, mostly 20–24 Gy, 16% fractionated treatment) | safety established, median overall survival of 11.8 months from radiotherapy |
| Aboudaram et al. 2017 [ | various | N | melanoma brain metastases | 17 patients received radiotherapy (r), 42 patients received radiotherapy and anti-PD-1 up to one month after radiotherapy (p) | Six-month progression-free survival was 65% (p) and 50% (r) |
| Nardin et al. 2018 [ | various | N | melanoma brain metastases | 25 patients, receiving durvalumab and various doses and fractions of irradiation | safety established, median overall survival of 14.6 months from radiotherapy |
| Trommer-Nestler et al. 2018 [ | concomitant | N | melanoma brain metastases | 13 patients received 18–22 Gy radiation and either pembrolizumab or nivolumab simultaneously (p), 13 patients received 18–20 Gy radiation (r) | after 6 months (p) 61% and (r) 15% of lesions regressed |
| Komatsu et al. 2018 [ | various | N | melanoma brain metastases | 5 patients receiving 10–13 3 Gy fractions of radiation and nivolumab 0–22 months after | partial response, stable disease and complete remission reported |
| Kotecha et al. 2019 [ | N | various brain metastases | 150 patients with 1003 brain metastases were treated with radiation and anti-PD-1, of these 367 metastases were treated within one half-life of anti-PD-1 (c), while 636 metastases were not (nc) | complete response was 50% (c) and 32% (nc); complete response was associated with overall survival; steroid treatment was detrimental |
Overview of clinical trials concerning comparison of anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 treatments in combination with radiotherapy in various cranial metastatic settings. Clinical trials are sorted primarily by cancer and treatment setting, secondary criteria being chronological. Short descriptions of patient collective, treatment, and outcome are included.
| Trial | Timing of Checkpoint Inhibition | Prospective (Y/N) | Cohort Description | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-PD-1 Compared to Anti-CTLA-4, Brain Metastasis | |||||
| Qian et al. 2016 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | Patients received 12–24 Gy radiation, 32 patients received anti-CTLA-4 or anti-PD-1 concurrently (d) and 22 non-concurrently (a); in the same cohort 54 received anti-CTLA-4 (c) and 21 received anti-PD-1 (p) | median percent reduction in lesion volume at 1.5 months was 63% (d), 41% (n), 71% (p), and 48% (c) |
| Choong et al. 2017 [ | N | melanoma brain metastases | 26 patients received radiation (r), 28 received radiation and anti-CTLA-4 (c), 11 received radiation and anti-PD-1 (p), and 39 received radiation and v-Raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1 (BRAF) and dual specificity mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitors (b) | median overall survival was 11 months (r), 8 months (c), 20 months (p), and 18 months (b) | |
| Gaudy-Marqueste et al. 2017 [ | N | melanoma brain metastases | BRAF-mutated patients were treated with radiation (mr) ( | two-year overall survival was 14% (mr), 9% (mm), 39% (mc), 54% (mi); one year overall survival was 14% (r), 41% (c), 64% (p), 75% (b) | |
| Stokes et al. 2017 [ | various | N, meta-analysis | melanoma brain metastases | 1287 patients with melanoma brain metastases receiving radiation were analyzed, of which 185 also received anti-CTLA-4 or anti-PD-1/PD-L1 (c), and the rest receiving radiation only (r) | median overall survival was 11 months (c) and 6 months (r) |
| Anderson et al. 2017 [ | N | melanoma brain metastases | 23 patients received radiation and pembrolizumab (p), 31 patients received radiation and ipilimumab (i), 27 patients received radiation only (r) | complete response was 35% (p), 13% (i), and 4% (r) | |
| Chen et al. 2018 [ | comparative | N | melanoma, Non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) and renal cancer (RCC) brain metastases | of NSCLC ( | median overall survival was 13 months (r), 15 months (n), and 25 months (c) |
| Robin et al. 2018 [ | comparative | N | melanoma brain metastases | 25 patients received radiation and anti-CTLA-4 within 8 weeks (i), 13 patients received radiation and anti-PD-1 with or without anti-CTLA-4 within 8 weeks (p) | median progression free survival was 2 months (i) and 23 months (p) |
| Lehrer et al. 2019 [ | comparative | N, meta-analysis | melanoma brain metastases | 218 patients across 7 studies received radiation and checkpoint inhibitors concurrently (c) before (b) or after (a) radiation | one-year overall survival was 65% (c), 41% (b), and 56% (a) |
| Minniti et al. 2019 [ | concomitant | N | melanoma brain metastases | 45 patients received radiation and ipilimumab (i), 35 patients received radiation and nivolumab (n) | median overall survival was 22 months (n) and 15 months (i) |
Figure 2Combination of external beam radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibiting antibodies. The optimal timing of immune checkpoint inhibition appears to be in the early phase of radiotherapy. Preclinical models indicate that cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) blockade may be more effective when administered days before irradiation. The optimal dose of radiation as determined in mouse models is indicated. The red gradient indicates suggested variability in cancer-specific clinical settings. Preliminary clinical studies have reported improved outcomes when irradiating multiple sites.
Overview of clinical trials concerning combination of radiotherapy and anti-PD-1 or anti-CTLA-4 treatment in NSCLC and other thoracic malignancies. Clinical trials are sorted primarily by cancer and treatment setting, secondary criteria being chronological. Short descriptions of patient collective, treatment, and outcome are included.
| Trial | Timing of Checkpoint Inhibition | Prospective (Y/N) | Cohort Description | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| anti-PD-1 or anti-CTLA-4, NSCLC | |||||
| Antonia et al. 2017 [ | after | Y | stage III NSCLC | all patients received chemoradiotherapy (platin based), 473 of which received durvalumab within at least 42 days (d), while 236 patients received placebo after chemoradiotherapy (p), of | median progression-free survival from randomization was 17 months (d) and 6 months (p) |
| Shaverdian et al. 2017 [ | after | Y | NSCLC | 97 patients receiving pembrolizumab, 42 patients had previously received radiotherapy (r) and 55 had not (n) | median progression-free survival was 4 months (r) and 2 months (n) |
| von Reibnitz et al. 2018 [ | various | N | various thoracic tumors/metastases | 62 patients received radiation and anti-PD-1/PD-L1, 12 patients received anti-CTLA-4 and radiation, 5 patients received both anti-PD-1/PD-L1 and anti-CTLA-4 | no differences among groups |
| Lesueur et al. 2018 [ | comparative | N | metastatic NSCLC | 104 patients received radiation and nivolumab with varying intervals | one-year overall survival was 48%, no correlation with nivolumab timing |
| Foster et al. 2019 [ | various | N, meta-analysis | NSCLC | 44,498 patients were analyzed | stereotactic radiotherapy and checkpoint inhibition predicted superior survival, independent on their combination |
| Shepard et al. 2019 [ | various | N | metastatic NSCLC | 34 patients received radiation, 12 patients received radiation and anti-PD-1/PD-L1 | no differences among groups |
| Yamaguchi et al. 2019 [ | before | N | NSCLC, stage III or IV | 66 patients received radiation before nivolumab treatment (r), 58 patients received nivolumab without radiation (n) | median progression-free survival was 204 days (r) and 79 days (n), median overall survival was 562 days (r) and 524 days (n) |
Overview of clinical trials concerning combination radiotherapy and immunotherapy in various malignancies. Clinical trials are sorted primarily by cancer and treatment setting, secondary criteria being chronological. Short descriptions of patient collective, treatment, and outcome are included.
| Trial | Timing of Checkpoint Inhibition | Prospective (Y/N) | Cohort Description | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Various Malignancies | |||||
| Kwon et al. 2014 [ | after | Y | bone metastasis from castration-resistant prostate cancer | 400 patients received 8 Gy of radiation (r), 399 patients received 8 Gy of radiation followed by ipilimumab up to two days later (i) | median overall survival was 10 months (r) and 11 months (i), not statistically significant |
| Tang et al. 2017 [ | various | Y | various malignancies | 35 patients with various malignancies received either 12.5 Gy of radiation 4 times or 6 Gy radiation 10 times, combined with ipilimumab either concomitantly or sequentially | combination was safe, limited value due to the small and varied cohort |
| Qin et al. 2018 [ | various | N | treatment resistant Hodgkin’s lymphoma | three patients were treated, two with radiation and concomitant nivolumab and one with radiation and nivolumab 2 months later | all patients alive and in complete remission after 23–27 months (historical complete remission rate under anti-PD-1: 17–22%) |
| Quéro et al. 2019 [ | N | treatment resistant Hodgkin’s lymphoma | four patients were treated with radiation and anti-PD-1 | after median follow-up of 13-months, all patients alive with complete metabolic response | |
| Floudas et al. 2019 [ | Y | metastatic colorectal cancer | 10 patients received PD-1 blocking protein AMP-224 on the last day of 1–3 radiation treatments, delivering 9 Gy each and low-dose cyclophosphamide | no objective response was noted, median overall survival was 6 months | |
| Liu et al. 2019 [ | Y | Pretreated, microsatellite stable cholangiocarcinoma | 3 patients received PD-1 blockade and stereotactic radiotherapy delivering 11–13 Gy in 4–5 fractions | 2 patients achieved partial response; one patient achieved complete response maintained for 11 months |