Literature DB >> 33521559

Combining radiation therapy and immunotherapy for lung cancers: a narrative review.

Chirag Modi1, Lyudmyla Berim2, Lauren Isserow1, Jyoti Malhotra2, Malini Patel2, John Langenfeld3, Joseph Aisner2, Doaa Almeldin1, Salma K Jabbour1.   

Abstract

Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer morbidity and mortality worldwide among both men and women. While surgical resection remains the standard of care for early stage NSCLC, chemoradiation has been a mainstay of treatment for locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) patients for decades. Consolidation immunotherapy has improved survival in this subset of patients after conventional chemoradiation, and has emerged as the new standard. The synergy between immunotherapy and radiation, as well as ongoing research on the effects of radiation on the immune system, allows for the exploration of new avenues in the treatment of LA-NSCLC. In addition to the use of durvalumab as consolidative systemic therapy after concurrent chemoradiotherapy for Stage III NSCLC, other combination regimens have been shown to be effective in various disease stages in preclinical and clinical studies. These regimens include CTLA-4 and PD/PDL-1 checkpoint inhibitors combined with radiation treatment. While these combined regimens have demonstrated efficacy, they are not without toxicity, and require additional evaluation when combined with radiation. In this review, we have summarized the immunostimulatory and immunosuppressive effects of radiation therapy. We also evaluate the current evidence and ongoing research supporting the combination of radiotherapy and immunotherapy across early to LA-NSCLC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Immunotherapy; chemoradiation; non-small cell lung cancer; radiotherapy; stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT)

Year:  2021        PMID: 33521559      PMCID: PMC7842553          DOI: 10.21037/shc-20-66

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Shanghai Chest        ISSN: 2521-3768


Background

Lung cancer is the most common cancer and a leading cause of cancer related death in the world. In 2018, there were approximately 2.1 million new cases of lung cancer diagnosed worldwide, and a 1.8 million lung cancer related deaths (1). Surgical resection remains the standard of care for treatment of stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), with reported long-term disease-free survival (DFS) rates of 80–90% (2–4). In patients with early stage NSCLC who are deemed not to be candidates for surgery or those who refuse surgical intervention, stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) has been demonstrated to be potentially comparable, with local control rates approaching 90% in some series (5,6). By contrast, definitive chemoradiotherapy followed by consolidative therapy with durvalumab, an anti–programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) antibody, has become the new standard of care for locally advanced unresectable NSCLC (7,8). SBRT has allowed for high doses of highly conformal radiation delivered in a limited number of fractions to a tumor, facilitating the precision of therapy while minimizing radiation dose to adjacent organs at risk. Radiation therapy (RT) has been shown to have a number of immunostimulatory effects, including priming the immune system, recruiting immune cells, and altering the immunosuppressive effects of the tumor microenvironment (9). In this review, we will summarize evidence and ongoing research on combining immunotherapy with conventional radiation or SBRT across early stage and locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer.

Methods

We performed a literature search using PubMed on radiation therapy and immunotherapy and also searched ClinicalTrials.Gov for ongoing and completed trials on the subject. Additionally, we evaluated research from major oncology conferences including ASTRO, ASCO, and ESMO to further compile a comprehensive list of studies. Relevant articles and studies were reviewed by the authors and their results were summarized. We present the following article in accordance with the Narrative Review reporting checklist (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/shc-20–66).

Effects of radiation on cancer immunity

Radiation therapy is known to induce cellular demise by inflicting double strand DNA damage mediated through a variety of mechanisms, including apoptosis, mitotic catastrophe, and radiation-induced senescence (10). Cell death triggers a tightly knitted series of immune events, both immunostimulatory and immunosuppressive. There are key major pathways mediating an RT induced immune response such as dendritic cell activation via tumor antigen presentation, increase in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, and modulation of extracellular signaling (7,8). New treatment regimens are being developed on the basis of these mechanisms.

Activation of dendritic cells

At the molecular level, ionizing radiation induces irreparable DNA damage within tumor cells, which in a dose responsive manner results in expansion of the intracellular peptide pool, expression of calreticulin, upregulation of the surface MHC class 1 molecules, leading to phagocytosis by dendritic cells (DC), DC activation, enhanced tumor antigen cross-presentation and promotion of inflammatory cytokines secretion (11,12). It has been shown that the process of uptake and cross-presentation of tumor-derived antigens by DC to T-cells, the RT-mediated tumor regression and adaptive immune response to RT is mediated by type I interferon (IFN-I) (13). The endoplasmic reticulum-associated stimulator of interferon genes (STING) protein has been demonstrated to be a mediator for induction of IFN-I by intracellular exogenous DNA (14,15). Burnette et al. demonstrated the ability of radiation to increase the expression of IFN-I (16). In mice without an IFN-B receptor, the ability of RT to reduce tumor growth was diminished. Therefore, DCs are central to the downstream effects of RT via IFN-1 and IFN-B.

Upregulation of CD8+ T cells

After recruitment and activation by RT-induced tissue damage, DCs migrate to the tumor-draining lymph nodes and present tumor-associated antigens (TAA) to CD8+ T cells. This presentation results in enhanced expansion and activation of the cytotoxic T cell pool comprised of tumor-specific effector CD8+ T cells (11). Radiation induces production of chemokines CXCL10 and CXCL16 by tumor cells and vascular cell adhesion molecules, VCAM-1 and ICAM, by endothelial cells, thereby facilitating trafficking, homing and adherence of the tumor-specific effector T cells to the irradiated tissue (16,17–22), as well as cancer lesions outside of the RT field, also contributing to the abscopal effect (23).

Induction of apoptosis

Another important mechanism of interaction between radiation and the immune system is the modulation of extracellular signaling at the time of cell death through the First Apoptosis Signal (FAS) pathway activation. FAS is a cell-surface molecule that induces programmed cell death through combining with FAS-Ligand (FAS-L). Subsequent activation of caspases 3, 6, and 7 leads to apoptotic cell death. Chakraborty et al. demonstrated upregulation of the FAS pathway in tumor cells by sublethal irradiation, resulting in improved lytic susceptibility to CD8+ cells and promotion of more effective antitumor responses in vivo (24,25). By contrast, several studies have shown that RT upregulates FAS-L on endothelial cells to preferential apoptosis in T effector cells while sparing T regulator cells, thereby creating a pro-tumoral and immunosuppressive environment (26,27). Thus, the depletion of FAS-L expression on tumor endothelial cells can potentially lead to an increase in CD8+ T cells entering the tumor microenvironment (26). Other radiation-induced death receptors have also been identified, including tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), as well as CD-80 and the natural killer group 2D (NKG2D) ligands, activation of which may lead to clearance of cancer cells by NK cells (28–30).

Immunosuppressive effects

Ionizing radiation also may have immunosuppressive properties. Local immune response to RT may be dampened as lymphocytes are sensitive to radiation doses and are cleared rapidly from the radiation field (31). Treatment-related lymphopenia is commonly seen in patients receiving RT (32). Preclinical studies have shown that cytotoxic T-cells are more radiosensitive than regulatory T-cells which can lead to a disproportionally higher number of regulatory T-cells and suppresses immune response. Novel strategies targeting regulatory T cells (Treg), tumor-associated macrophages, and cancer-associated fibroblasts in combination with radiation treatment and immunotherapy are being investigated (17,21,22,33).

Radiation doses and timing

Dose per fraction and fractionation schemes can also affect the immune response induced by radiation. Shaue et al. showed a dose dependent tumor control and increase in number of tumor-reactive T cells in a spleen of a murine melanoma model. However, at high RT doses beyond 7.5 Gy per fraction, researchers observed an increased representation of Tregs, which abrogated further immune response (34). High RT doses of greater than 18–20 Gy per fraction induce DNA exonuclease Trex1, which degrades cytosolic DNA and prevents activation of STING pathway, therefore suppressing radiotherapy-induced tumor immunogenicity (35). Preclinical data has shown that SBRT doses in the range of 12–18 Gy can lead to an upregulation of exonuclease in Trex1, but fail to do so at lower doses (35). Lugade et al. showed that 15 Gy single dose irradiation resulted in greater numbers of host immune cell infiltrate on Day 14 than a 5 Gy ×3 fractionation in a B16 melanoma model (17). Despite these preclinical models, the optimal fractionation schemes in combination with immunotherapy require further clinical evaluation.

Evidence for immunoradiotherapy in NSCLC

One important hallmark of cancer is the ability of neoplastic cells to evade immunological destruction by lymphocytes, macrophages, and natural killer cells (36). Over the past decade various approaches to increase cancer immunogenicity have been explored. Radiotherapy can increase tumor immunogenicity by the upregulation of antigen expression and recognition by immune cells, overcoming an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment via enhanced production of immunostimulatory cytokines, and engaging antigen-presenting and immune effector cells within the tumor microenvironment (36). Antitumor immunity induced by local RT as a single modality is most often insufficient to achieve complete and long-lasting tumor clearance. Synergy between radiation therapy and immunotherapy has been therefore explored in clinical trials with various malignancies, including lung cancer. Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has recently changed the paradigm of our therapeutic approach to the management of multiple neoplastic diseases. Increased recognition of favorable effects of RT immunogenicity stimulated interest and development in a spectrum of clinical trials studying synergism between the two therapeutic strategies.

CTLA-4 inhibitors in combination with radiation therapy

Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4, CD152), is a protein lymphocyte surface receptor that is a CD28 homolog with high affinity for B7–1 and B7–2. In contrast to the interaction of CD28 with B7–1/2, which transmits a stimulatory signal for T cell proliferation and activation, the binding of CTLA-4 to B7–1/2 results in inhibition of the early T cell activation. CTLA-4 is a key negative regulator of T cell activation, acting as an immune checkpoint. Following engagement with T cell receptor, CTLA-4 can translocate to the cell surface, where it outcompetes CD28 for binding to critical costimulatory molecules (CD80, CD86) and mediates inhibitory signaling into the T cell, resulting in arrest of both proliferation and activation (37). CTLA-4 blockade potentiates T cell proliferation and activation and leads to production of immuno-stimulatory molecules including IFN-gamma, IL-2, and TNF-alpha (38,39). Ji et al. showed an increase in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and INF-gamma levels with anti-CTLA-4 blockade (40). CTLA-4 blocking antibody has been combined with radiation therapy to study a potential synergistic response in pre-clinical setting (41–43). Dewan et al. tested various dose fractionation regimens to determine the synergistic antitumor effect between radiation and 9H10 monoclonal antibody against CTLA-4 (42). Specifically, breast and colon carcinoma mouse models were treated with three distinct regimens of RT (20 Gy ×1, 8 Gy ×3, or 6 Gy ×5) in combination with a 9H10 CTLA-4 antibody versus 9H10 CTLA-4 antibody alone. While the CTLA-4 antibody alone had no detectable effect on tumor size, the combination of the CTLA-4 antibody with all of the three fractionated radiotherapy regimens led to significant growth inhibition of the tumor (P<0.001). Additionally, a significant decrease in size of the tumor outside the radiation field, or the abscopal effect, was observed in mice treated with the combination of CTLA-4 antibody and fractionated radiotherapy. The frequency of CD8+ T cells showing tumor-specific IFN-gamma production was found to be proportional to the inhibition of the distant secondary tumor (42). The aforementioned preclinical work led to multiple clinical trials assessing the feasibility of combining CTLA-4 blockade and RT. A phase I study completed by Tang et al. combined ipilimumab with SBRT in different fractionation schemes (41). In the study, 31 patients with metastatic solid tumors to the lung and liver received 3 mg/kg of ipilimumab every 3 weeks for 4 doses with 50 Gy in 4 fractions or 60 Gy in 10 fractions concurrently or sequentially. Combination therapy was found to be safe and effective, demonstrating 10% out-of-field immune-related partial response and 23% clinical benefit. Additionally, increased peripheral T-cell activation was observed in patients deriving clinical benefit. Formenti et al. studied biology of abscopal response in thirty-nine patients with refractory metastatic NSCLC treated with RT to a single metastatic lesion concurrently with ipilimumab (44). Objective systemic responses were observed in 18% of patients and an additional 31% of patients had disease control. Increased serum interferon-β after RT, rapid in vivo expansion and persistence of a large number of tumor-specific T cell clones in peripheral blood were shown to be the strongest predictors of response, further supporting hypothesis of RT-induced immunogenicity and the abscopal phenomenon (44).

PD-1 or PDL-1 inhibitors in combination with RT

Programmed death receptor-1 protein (PD-1) is a cell surface receptor, a member of the CD28 superfamily, that delivers inhibitory signal to T cell activation through binding to soluble ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2. In contrast to CTLA-4, which is only expressed on T cells thereby regulating early immune response primarily in lymph nodes, PD-1 is expressed by T cells, B cells, macrophages, and some tumor cells. PD-1 regulates T cell effector responses in the peripheral tissues, whereby CTLA-4 controls T cells activation. Similarly to CTLA-4, PD-1 signaling promotes apoptosis in antigen-specific T-cells, interferes with T cell proliferation and cytokine signaling, and reduces apoptosis of T regulatory cells (45). One of the signs of loss of effector function and T cell exhaustion is increased expression of PD-1 (46). In addition to CTLA-4 inhibitors, PD-1 and PDL-1 inhibitors have also been shown to have a synergistic effect with radiation in NSCLC (47,48). A preclinical study by Deng et al. showed that PD-L1 expression was upregulated on tumor cells after radiation therapy (47). Studying synergy of RT and PD-1 blockade in the Kras-driven genetically engineered mouse models of NSCLC, Herter-Sprie and Koyama et al. demonstrated that RT leads to an adaptive upregulation of tumor cell PD-L1 expression and that concomitant administration of PD-1 antibody generates effective antitumor immunity and long-term tumor control (49). Furthermore, they demonstrated lack of antineoplastic efficacy of PD-1 blockade in tumors that relapsed after RT, along with significant induction of T cell inhibitory markers in post-RT relapse setting in the murine model, suggesting that most synergy between RT and PD-1 inhibition can be achieved in RT-naïve tumors (50,51).

Role of immunotherapy in combination with RT in treatment of locally advanced NSCLC

Approximately one quarter of patients with lung cancer are diagnosed with locally advanced NSCLC (LA-NSCLC) (52). Despite definitive multimodality treatment of the primary tumor, the majority of the patients experience disease recurrence (53), with distant failures being the most common patterns of recurrence in adenocarcinoma (54,55). Therefore, innovative strategies have been under investigation aiming to improve long-term disease control in LA-NSCLC patients. One of such novel approaches is harnessing RT’s immunomodulatory properties to enhance efficacy of the immune checkpoint inhibitors.

Sequential use of checkpoint inhibitors and RT in locally advanced NSCLC

Expanding on preclinical work, several clinical trials have reported encouraging results in employing combinations of radiation therapy with inhibition of PD-1 signaling pathway as a novel strategy for treatment of LA-NSCLC. Shaverdian et al. (56) conducted a secondary analysis of the expansion NSCLC cohort from the KEYNOTE-001 trial (57,58) aiming to assess efficacy and safety of therapy with the PD-1 inhibitor Pembrolizumab in patients with advanced NSCLC who previously received radiotherapy for treatment of lung cancer. The investigators evaluated ninety-eight patients treated at a single institution who were enrolled on the seminal KEYNOTE-001 trial which was a large international, multicenter, phase 1 trial of single agent pembrolizumab in patients with advanced solid tumors (59). The median PFS was substantially longer in patients who received any type of previous radiation therapy before pembrolizumab (4.4 versus 2.1 months, HR 0.56, P=0.019). Overall survival was also significantly longer in patients with a history of radiation therapy (10.6 versus 5.3 months, HR 0·58, P=0.026). The safety profile was acceptable, with three patients who had received previous thoracic radiation therapy vs. one patient with no previous radiation to the chest developing ≥ Grade 3 treatment related pulmonary toxicities (56). Pembrolizumab was also evaluated as a consolidative therapy in the phase II study conducted by the Hoosier Cancer Research Network LUN 14–179 (60,61). The primary endpoint was time to metastatic disease or death (TMDD).In this trial 93 patients with unresectable stage III A-B NSCLC were treated with pembrolizumab for up to a year following definitive chemoradiation. With a median follow up of 32.2 months, consolidation pembrolizumab improved the TMDD and PFS in comparison to historical controls. The median TMDD was 30.7 months. The median PFS was 18.7 months and the median OS was 35.8 months. The toxicity profile was comparable to that observed in previous pembrolizumab studies. Five patients (5.4%) experienced Grade 3–4 pneumonitis, and there was one pneumonitis-related death. The most robust and practice-changing results of investigating immunotherapy for treatment of locally advanced NSCLC in the consolidative setting was reported with PD-L1 inhibition by durvalumab (7,8). The PACIFIC trial made a significant impact on the treatment paradigm for locally advanced NSCLC by becoming the first phase III prospective randomized controlled trial to show an increase in PFS and OS using consolidation durvalumab following concurrent chemoradiation. In this trial, over 700 patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC without disease progression were randomized in a 2:1 ratio to receive up to 12 months of either durvalumab or placebo following concurrent chemoradiation. The initial analysis demonstrated a significantly improved PFS compared to the placebo (16.8 months compared to 5.6 months, P<0.001) leading to the FDA and EMA approval of durvalumab for use in the consolidative space of LA-NSCLC patients. Updated analysis showed a significantly improved two-year overall survival rates in the durvalumab arm (66.3% vs. 55.6%, P=0.005). The median time to death or distant metastasis was markedly prolonged in durvalumab arm (28.3 vs. 16.2 months, HR 0.53 (95% Cl: 0.41–0.68). In the 3-year update, median duration of follow up was 33 months. The overall median survival has yet to be reached with durvalumab versus 29.1 months with placebo. The 3-year OS continued to demonstrate benefit of maintenance durvalumab (57% vs. 43.5%). Patient-reported outcomes showed no clinically important differences between the groups suggesting the tolerability of durvalumab (7,8,62,63).

Concurrent use of checkpoint inhibitors and RT in locally advanced NSCLC

Building upon the success of chemoradiation followed by immunotherapy in treating LA-NSCLC, many trials are evaluating the role of immunotherapy in earlier in the course of therapy. In a completed trial by Jabbour et al., twenty-one patients received pembrolizumab concurrently with chemoradiation therapy (chemoRT) in locally advanced NSCLC (64). Specifically, patients were divided into five cohorts: (I) full dose (FD) pembrolizumab (200 mg intravenously Q3Wk) starting 2–6 weeks after chemoRT; (II) reduced dose (RD) pembrolizumab (100 mg intravenously Q3Wk) starting Day 29 of chemoRT, (III) FD pembrolizumab starting Day 29 of chemoRT, (IV) RD pembrolizumab starting on Day 1 of chemoRT, (V) FD pembrolizumab starting on Day 1 of chemoRT. All cohorts received Q3Wk of pembrolizumab up to 18 cycles. Dose limiting toxicity (DLT) was defined as grade 4 or higher of pneumonitis within 21 days of the first cycle of pembrolizumab. No DLTs were reported in any cohorts. Grade 3 or higher irAEs were reported in 4 patients. For patients who received greater than two doses, the median PFS was 21 months (95% CI: 15.3 to infinity). Overall, combined PD-1 treatment and chemoRT was well tolerated with encouraging PFS of 69.7% at 12 months, however, with potentially an increased risk of pneumonitis using concurrent PD-1 checkpoint blockade (64). The phase II DETERRED study aimed to assess the safety and feasibility of concurrent use of atezolizumab with chemoradiotherapy followed by consolidation with atezolizumab in LA-NSCLC (65,66). In this study, immunotherapy was given sequentially in part one (N=10) or concurrently in part two (N=30) with chemoradiation, followed by full dose doublet chemotherapy and consolidation atezolizumab. In Part 1, the median PFS was 18.6 months, and the OS was 22.8 months. In Part 2, the median PFS was 13.2 months, and OS was not reached. The PD-L1 status in baseline tumor biopsy was evaluable for 34 patients. There were no significant differences in cancer recurrence based on PD-L1 expression of <1% vs. ≥1% (56.3% vs. 38.9%, respectively), or for the PD-L1 cutoff of less or more than 50% (53.8% vs. 25%). There was no additive toxicity as a result of concurrent use of Atezolizumab with RT, and frequency and grade of pneumonitis were similar to that seen in previous trials (four patients developed grade 2 and one patient grade 3 pneumonitis). The NICOLAS-ETOP trial was conducted in Europe and was a phase II trial which evaluated safety of nivolumab with concurrent chemoRT in unresectable LA-NSCLC (67). In this trial, 82 patients received three cycles of platinum-based chemotherapy concurrently or sequentially with RT. In the concurrent chemoRT regimen, radiotherapy was delivered at 66 Gy in 33 daily fractions, while for the sequential chemoRT regimen, radiotherapy was delivered in 24 daily fractions of 2.75 Gy. The mean lung dose was restricted to 20 Gy. Nivolumab started concurrently with RT. In the interim analysis, no unexpected adverse effects or safety concerns have been reported. For the first 21 patients, no grade ≥3 pneumonitis was observed in 3 months following completion of RT, while one late event occurred 6 months after completion of RT. One -year PFS will be evaluated in an expanded patient cohort.

Use of immunotherapy with RT in Stage IV patients

Immunogenic properties of radiotherapy, its ability to convert immunologically “cold” tumors into “hot” tumors capable of inducing immune response has generated a new concept of multisite SBRT as an emerging paradigm for treatment of metastatic disease. Luke et al. evaluated the safety of pembrolizumab and multisite SBRT in 79 patients with solid tumors, seven of who had Stage IV NSCLC (68). The patients received SBRT to a dose 30–50 Gy in 3–5 fractions delivered to 2–4 metastatic lesions. Pembrolizumab was started within 7 days from completion of SBRT. With a median follow up of 5.5 months, 6 patients experienced DLT without radiation dose changes. The percent change in tumor diameter for irradiated patients was significantly improved (−21.7%) for irradiated patients compared to nonirradiated patients (1.7%). In the 68 patients with imaging follow-up, the overall objective response rate was 13.2%. Median PFS and OS were 3.1 and 9.6 months, respectively. Expression of interferon-γ-associated genes from post-SBRT tumor biopsy specimens significantly correlated with nonirradiated tumor response. Overall, the data shows synergy between SBRT and pembrolizumab in inducing out of field responses (68).

Dual checkpoint blockade in combination with radiation

The Big Ten Cancer Research Consortium LUN 16–081 is a randomized, multi-center, phase II study, evaluating efficacy and safety of combining a CTLA-4 inhibitor with a PD-1 inhibitor as consolidation therapy following definitive chemoRT in patients with unresectable stage IIIA/IIIB NSCLC. An interim safety analysis has been reported (69). There were no unexpected safety signals in the first 20 patients treated on protocol. Four patients experienced ≥ Grade 2 pneumonitis. The incidence of ≥ Grade 3 irAEs was higher in the combination arm, however these were manageable with the use of established guidelines, and no therapy related deaths were observed. Pneumonitis rates for all aforementioned trials are summarized in Table 1.
Table 1

Pneumonitis rates of various trials

Name of Study# of PatientsPneumonitis Rates
G1/G2G3G5

KEYNOTE 00124Treatment-related Pneumonitis 12.5%
PACIFIC475≥G1=33.9%≥G3=3.4%G5=0.08%
LUN 14–17993≥G2=17.2%≥G3=6.5%G5=1.07%
DETERRED40≥G2=12.5%G3=2.5%G5=0%
Jabbour et al.23≥G2=26%≥G3=8.6%G5=4.34%
NICOLAS80≥G1=42.5%≥G3=10%G5=0%
LUN 16–08120≥G2=20%G3=5%G5=0%

SBRT with immunotherapy in Early Stage NSCLC

There are several ongoing prospective trials which are investigating the use of SBRT with immunotherapy for medically inoperable early-stage non-small cell lung cancer, included in Table 2. Some of the endpoints being evaluated are safety, progression-free survival, overall survival, pneumonitis rates, hematologic toxicities, and adverse events. While combined immunoradiotherapy has brought substantial benefit in locally advanced NSCLC patients, these ongoing trials will help elucidate whether this benefit is seen in early stage patients as well.
Table 2

Ongoing trials of various immunotherapies with SBRT used in NSCLC

Name of StudyDrugPhaseStageClinical Trial #

Atezolizumab and Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy in Treating Patients With Non-small Cell Lung CancerAtezolizumabIINCT02599454
SABR-ATAC: A Trial of TGF-beta Inhibition and Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy for Early Stage Non-small Cell Lung CancerFresolimumabI/IIINCT02581787
SBRT Combined With Avelumab for Management of Early Stage NSCLCAvelumabI/IIINCT03050554
Astra Zeneca ISABR Study: Randomized Phase I/II Study of Stereotactic Body RadiotherapyDurvalumabI/III/IINCT03148327
SBRT With Immunotherapy in Early Stage Non-small Cell Lung Cancer: Tolerability and Lung Effects (STILE)NivolumabI/III/IINCT03383302
Ablative STEreotactic RadiOtherapy wIth Durvalumab (ASTEROID)DurvalumabIIINCT03446547
Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy With or Without Nivolumab in Treating Patients With Stage I-IIA or Recurrent NSCLCNivolumabIII/IINCT03110978
Durvalumab With or Without SBRT in Clinical Stage I, II and IIIA NSCLCDurvalumabIII/II/IIINCT02904954
Durvalumab and Consolidation SBRT Following CRT for Locally Advanced Stage III NSCLCDurvalumabIIIIINCT03589547
FLT3 Ligand Immunotherapy and Stereotactic Radiotherapy for Advanced Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (FLT3)FLT3 Ligand Therapy (CDX-301)IIIII/IVNCT02839265
Durvalumab vs. Placebo Following Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy in Early Stage Unresected Non-small Cell Lung Cancer Patients (PACIFIC-4)DurvalumabIIII/IINCT03833154
Efficacy and Safety Study of Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) With or Without Pembrolizumab in Adults With Medically Inoperable Stage I or IIA Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (Keynote-867)PembrolizumabIIII/IINCT03924869
Testing the Addition of the Drug Atezolizumab to the Usual Radiation Treatment for Patients With Early Non-small Cell Lung CancerAtezolizumabIIII/IINCT04214262

Conclusions

The combination of conventional RT or SBRT with immunotherapy is a promising treatment option for patients with locally advanced non-small lung cancer. Further research will be required on mitigating toxicities in these patients. Ongoing trials will delineate subsets of patients that can derive meaningful benefit by the addition of immunotherapy to radiation therapy, while helping to identify the patients at risk for heightened toxicity from the addition of RT to immunotherapy, thereby further improving the survival outcomes of patients with lung cancer.
  65 in total

1.  Whole body irradiation; radiobiology or medicine?

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2.  Rapid induction of cytokine gene expression in the lung after single and fractionated doses of radiation.

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3.  Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 and Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule Are Induced by Ionizing Radiation on Lymphatic Endothelium.

Authors:  María E Rodriguez-Ruiz; Saray Garasa; Inmaculada Rodriguez; Jose Luis Solorzano; Benigno Barbes; Alba Yanguas; Alvaro Teijeira; Iñaki Etxeberria; José Javier Aristu; Cornelia Halin; Ignacio Melero; Ana Rouzaut
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2016-11-07       Impact factor: 7.038

4.  Phase II Trial of Concurrent Atezolizumab With Chemoradiation for Unresectable NSCLC.

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Journal:  J Thorac Oncol       Date:  2019-11-25       Impact factor: 15.609

5.  Survival Rates After Lobectomy, Segmentectomy, and Wedge Resection for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.

Authors:  Jinlin Cao; Ping Yuan; Yiqing Wang; Jinming Xu; Xiaoshuai Yuan; Zhitian Wang; Wang Lv; Jian Hu
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2018-02-17       Impact factor: 4.330

Review 6.  Radiation-induced cell death mechanisms.

Authors:  David Eriksson; Torgny Stigbrand
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2010-05-20

7.  Immune-mediated inhibition of metastases after treatment with local radiation and CTLA-4 blockade in a mouse model of breast cancer.

Authors:  Sandra Demaria; Noriko Kawashima; Anne Marie Yang; Mary Louise Devitt; James S Babb; James P Allison; Silvia C Formenti
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2005-01-15       Impact factor: 12.531

8.  Ionizing radiation activates expression of FOXO3a, Fas ligand, and Bim, and induces cell apoptosis.

Authors:  Jer-Yen Yang; Weiya Xia; Mickey C-T Hu
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 5.650

9.  Increase of NKG2D ligands and sensitivity to NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity of tumor cells by heat shock and ionizing radiation.

Authors:  Joo-Young Kim; Young-Ok Son; Soon-Won Park; Jae-Ho Bae; Joo Seop Chung; Hyung Hoi Kim; Byung-Seon Chung; Sun-Hee Kim; Chi-Dug Kang
Journal:  Exp Mol Med       Date:  2006-10-31       Impact factor: 8.718

10.  Durvalumab after Chemoradiotherapy in Stage III Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer.

Authors:  Scott J Antonia; Augusto Villegas; Davey Daniel; David Vicente; Shuji Murakami; Rina Hui; Takashi Yokoi; Alberto Chiappori; Ki H Lee; Maike de Wit; Byoung C Cho; Maryam Bourhaba; Xavier Quantin; Takaaki Tokito; Tarek Mekhail; David Planchard; Young-Chul Kim; Christos S Karapetis; Sandrine Hiret; Gyula Ostoros; Kaoru Kubota; Jhanelle E Gray; Luis Paz-Ares; Javier de Castro Carpeño; Catherine Wadsworth; Giovanni Melillo; Haiyi Jiang; Yifan Huang; Phillip A Dennis; Mustafa Özgüroğlu
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2017-09-08       Impact factor: 91.245

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Review 1.  Translation of Precision Medicine Research Into Biomarker-Informed Care in Radiation Oncology.

Authors:  Jessica A Scarborough; Jacob G Scott
Journal:  Semin Radiat Oncol       Date:  2022-01       Impact factor: 5.421

  1 in total

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