| Literature DB >> 35740542 |
Tobias Freyberg Justesen1, Adile Orhan1, Hans Raskov1, Christian Nolsoe2,3, Ismail Gögenur1,4.
Abstract
The discovery of electroporation in 1968 has led to the development of electrochemotherapy (ECT) and irreversible electroporation (IRE). ECT and IRE have been established as treatments of cutaneous and subcutaneous tumors and locally advanced pancreatic cancer, respectively. Interestingly, the treatment modalities have been shown to elicit immunogenic cell death, which in turn can induce an immune response towards the tumor cells. With the dawn of the immunotherapy era, the potential of combining ECT and IRE with immunotherapy has led to the launch of numerous studies. Data from the first clinical trials are promising, and new combination regimes might change the way we treat tumors characterized by low immunogenicity and high levels of immunosuppression, such as melanoma and pancreatic cancer. In this review we will give an introduction to ECT and IRE and discuss the impact on the immune system. Additionally, we will present the results of clinical and preclinical trials, investigating the combination of electroporation modalities and immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: abscopal effect; electrochemotherapy; immune response; immunotherapy; irreversible electroporation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740542 PMCID: PMC9221311 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14122876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1(a) The strength and duration of electrical stimulation determines the cellular outcome. (b) The addition of agents such as chemotherapy can prevent cancer cells from recovery and lead to cell death. ECT, electrochemotherapy; IRE, irreversible electroporation. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 7 April 2022).
Figure 2The interplay between the peripheral immune system and the tumor microenvironment (TME). CAF, cancer-associated fibroblast; CCL, CC chemokine ligand; CTC, circulating tumor cell; IL, interleukin; MDSC, myeloid-derived suppressor cell; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; TAM, tumor-associated macrophage; Treg, regulatory T cell; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 7 April 2022).
Summary of ECT studies investigating the effects on the immune system.
| Species | Authors | Interventions (Type, n) | Cancer Types | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Gasljevic et al., 2017 [ | ECT (bleomycin, 7) | Colorectal cancer | ECT induced coagulation necrosis. The majority of vessels >5 mm in diameter remained functional. |
| Bigi et al., 2016 [ | ECT (bleomycin, 2) | Cutaneous melanoma | High prevalence of tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T cells and foci of NK cells 3 h to 1 month after ECT. Apoptotic cell death was followed by necrosis 48–72 h after ECT. | |
| Gerlini et al., 2013 [ | ECT (bleomycin, 9) | Metastatic melanoma | ECT promoted Langerhans cell migration from the tumor to draining lymph nodes and DC recruitment to the tumor. Further, DCs found in low number before ECT greatly increased at day 7 to 14. | |
| Mouse | Tremble et al., 2019 [ | ECT (cisplatin) | Colorectal cancer | ECT increased tumor infiltration of macrophages, neutrophils, B, NK, natural killer T cells, and DCs. Further, it decreased tumor growth of both treated and distal non-treated tumors. |
| Ursic et al., 2018 [ | ECT (cisplatin/oxaliplatin) | Melanoma | ECT induced a 4-fold increase in tumor infiltration of NK cells and CD8+ T cells. | |
| Calvet et al., 2014 [ | ECT (bleomycin) | Colon cancer | ECT induced ICD through the liberation of ATP and HMGB1 and the translocation of calreticulin to the cell surface. | |
| Markelc et al., 2013 [ | ECT (bleomycin) | Colorectal cancer | ECT induced a complete stop of the tumor blood vessels for up to 24 h. No damage to peritumoral normal blood vessels. | |
| Roux et al., 2008 [ | ECT (bleomycin) | Sarcoma | ECT induced recruitment of tumor-infiltrating DCs and CD8+ T cells after 48–96 h, while the presence of CD4+ T cells remained stable. | |
| Torrero et al., 2006 [ | ECT (bleomycin) | Breast cancer | ECT induced inhibition of angiogenesis in tumors but did not increase CD8+ T cell activity. | |
| Mekid et al., 2003 [ | ECT (bleomycin) | Sarcoma | ECT increased the tumor infiltration of lymphocytes after 25, 50, and 75 h, in particular in the vicinity of apoptotic cells. | |
| Sersa et al., 1997 [ | ECT (cisplatin) | Sarcoma | The tumor growth delay in immunocompetent mice was twice as long as in immunodeficient mice. Further, a high percentage of tumor cures was achieved in immunocompetent mice but none in immunodeficient mice. | |
| Cell | Fernandes et al., 2019 [ | ECT (bleomycin/cisplatin/oxaliplatin) | Pancreatic cancer | ECT led to necroptosis. |
| Ali et al., 2018 [ | ECT (bleomycin/cisplatin/oxaliplatin) | Pancreatic cancer | The ECT treatments induced changes in stemness inducing factors related to cancer stem cells. |
DC, dendritic cell; ECT, electrochemotherapy; ICD, immunogenic cell death; NK cells, natural killer cells; PD, progressive disease.
Summary of IRE studies investigating the effects on the immune system.
| Species | Authors | Interventions (n) | Cancer Types | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Guo et al., 2021 [ | IRE (11) | Hepatocellular carcinoma | The peripheral neutrophils and monocytes increased by day 1 after IRE and returned to baseline at day 7, while CD4+ T cells decreased by day 1 followed by an increase in the next days. CD8+ T cells remained unchanged. |
| He et al., 2019 [ | IRE (34) | Locally advanced pancreatic cancer | The peripheral CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, and NK cells decreased by day 3 after IRE followed by an increase at day 7, while a reverse trend was shown for Treg cells. | |
| Pandit et al., 2019 [ | IRE/pancreatectomy (11/4) | Locally advanced pancreatic cancer | The peripheral Treg populations increased day 1 to 3 and decreased from day 3 to 5 in the IRE group compared to increases on day 1 to 3 as well as increases on day 3 to 5 in the pancreatectomy group. | |
| Scheffer et al., 2019 [ | IRE (10) | Locally advanced pancreatic cancer | Pre- and post-IRE peripheral levels of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells did not change. At 2 weeks following IRE, a decrease in total Tregs was observed, as well as in aTregs and in resting Tregs, accompanied by a transient increase in both peripheral CD4+PD-1+ and CD8+PD-1+ T cell numbers. | |
| Beitel-White et al., 2019 [ | IRE (8) | Pancreatic cancer (stage III) | An increase in current change during IRE treatment was associated with decreases in Treg populations 24 h after IRE. Changes in current above 20A induced decreased Treg populations. Further, a trend was shown towards increased survival for the group of patients with a >2% decrease in Treg cells. | |
| Swine | Fujimori et al., 2021 [ | IRE/microwave ablation | Normal lung | Fifty percent of blood vessels and collagen were intact 2 days after IRE compared to 0% after microwave ablation. Further, the number of CD3+ T cells increased more after IRE than after microwave ablation. |
| Rabbit | Lee et al., 2012 [ | IRE | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Examinations of non-IRE treated organs, e.g., the lungs, showed no metastases in the IRE group, while all 15 rabbits in the control group had lung metastases. |
| Mouse | Dai et al., 2021 [ | IRE | Hepatocellular carcinoma | IRE increased the percentage of IFN-γ+ CD8+ T cells in splenocytes and increased tumor infiltration of CD8+ T cells. On day 7, reductions of both peripheral and intratumoral Treg cells and PD-1+ T cells were shown. |
| He et al., 2020 [ | IRE | Pancreatic cancer | IRE resulted in longer survival and more proliferating CD8+ T cells in the tumor and spleen. Both memory and effector CD8+ T cells were increased in the tumor and the tumor-draining lymph node regions. The viable region showed increased microvessel density and softening of the extracellular matrix. | |
| Chen et al., 2017 [ | IRE | Hepatocellular carcinoma | IRE induced a change in the T helper 1/T helper 2 cell ratio towards T helper 1 dominance, an increase in macrophage tumor infiltration, and an increase in IFN-γ and IL-2 compared to controls. | |
| White et al., 2018 [ | IRE or cryoablation | Pancreatic cancer | IRE induced a higher number of tumor-infiltrating T cells and macrophages at 12 and 24 h after treatment. | |
| Bulvik et al., 2016 [ | IRE/radiofrequency ablation (82/82) | Normal liver | The tumor infiltration of neutrophils and macrophages was increased in both groups; however, it was greater in the radiofrequency ablation group. In the IRE group, the infiltration of the neutrophils and macrophages extended along the preserved vessels within the ablation zone. | |
| Neal et al., 2013 [ | IRE | Renal carcinoma | IRE-treated immunocompetent mice showed robust T-cell infiltration at the zone between viable and dead tumors. Further, IRE-treated immunocompetent mice showed a greater treatment response than did immunodeficient mice. | |
| José et al., 2012 [ | IRE | Pancreatic cancer | IRE was not found to activate apoptotic cell death measured by caspase-3 positive cells in the tumors. The vascular architecture of the tumor was disrupted from day 1 after IRE and onward. | |
| Al-sakere et al., 2007 [ | IRE | Sarcoma | No tumor infiltration of CD4+ or CD8+ T lymphocytes, macrophages, APCs, dendritic cells were observed 2 and 6 h after IRE. | |
| Li et al., 2012 [ | IRE/sham surgery/resection/control (28/28/28/28) | Osteosarcoma | IRE and resection increased the percentages of the peripheral CD3+ and CD4+ cells, as well as the CD4+/CD8+ ratio 7 days after treatment. A more rapid and prolonged increase was seen in the IRE group. IRE and resection caused decreases in IL-10 from day 3 to 21. The percentage of INF-γ-positive splenocytes was higher in the IRE group. | |
| Rat | He et al., 2021 [ | IRE | Pancreatic cancer | IRE caused increased levels of HMGB1, HSP70, and calreticulin. Seven days after IRE, higher frequencies of M1 macrophages in the tumor and a regional lymph node were seen compared to controls, while a decrease in M2 macrophages was seen in the tumor. |
| Cell | He et al., 2021 [ | IRE | Pancreatic cancer | HMGB1 were shown to induce M1 macrophage polarization via receptor of advanced glycation end-product. Further, HMGB1 could enhance the phagocytosis of dying tumor cells by macrophages. |
| Shao et al., 2019 [ | IRE/thermal therapy/cryosurgery | Melanoma | IRE caused the greatest protein release, second lowest denaturation rate of the released protein (30%), the most TLR2 (a measure of the relative antigen content of the released protein) release, and the strongest T cell response. | |
| Zhao et al., 2019 [ | IRE/radiotherapy | Pancreatic cancer | IRE increased the ATP and HMGB1 levels by 11 and 13 fold, respectively, compared to radiotherapy, which did not cause the release of ATP and HMGB1. | |
| Goswami et al., 2017 [ | IRE/thermal shock/chemical poration | Triple negative breast cancer | IRE caused upregulation of IL-6 and TNF, while thymic stromal lymphopoietin was down-regulated. |
APC, antigen-presenting cell; aTreg, activated Tregs; DC, dendritic cell; IL, interleukin; IRE, irreversible electroporation; Treg, regulatory T cell; TRP2, Toll-like receptor 2.
Figure 3Model of how electroporation may induce an immune response and elicit an abscopal effect when combined with immunotherapy. aT cell, activated T cell; CAF, cancer-associated fibroblast; CTLA-4, cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4; DAMP, damage-associated molecular pattern; DC, dendritic cell; ECT, electrochemotherapy; IRE, irreversible electroporation; NK cell, natural killer cell; PD-1, programmed death receptor 1; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; TAA, tumor-associated antigen; TLR, Toll-like receptor; TLR3-L, TLR3 ligand; Treg, regulatory T cell. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 7 April 2022).
Summary of ECT + immunotherapy studies.
| Species | Authors | Interventions (n) | Cancer Types | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Campana et al., 2021 [ | ECT (bleomycin)/pembrolizumab/ECT + pembrolizumab (41/44/45) ** | Metastatic melanoma | Local response: |
| Quaresmini et al., 2021 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + nivolumab (1) * | Metastatic melanoma | Durable CR (>1 year) | |
| Karaca et al., 2018 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + nivolumab (1) * | Metastatic melanoma | Durable CR (>1 year) locally and systemic | |
| Hribernok et al., 2016 [ | ECT (bleomycin/cisplatin) + INF-α (5) ** | Advanced melanoma | Three patients with CR (1–23 lesions), 1 patient with CR of >85% of lesions (80 lesions), 1 patient with PR (5 lesions) | |
| Theurich et al., 2016 [ | (ECT/radiotherapy) + ipilimumab/ipilimumab (45/82) *** | Advanced melanoma | Local response: | |
| Heppt et al., 2016 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + ICI (ipilimumab/pembrolizumab/nivolumab, 33) ** | Metastatic melanoma | Local response: 15% CR, 52% PR | |
| Mozzillo et al., 2015 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + ipilimumab (15) ** | Metastatic melanoma | Local response: 27% CR, 40% PR | |
| Brizio et al., 2015 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + ipilimumab (1) * | Metastatic melanoma | ECT: Multiple liver and adrenal glands metastases after 3 ECT treatments | |
| Andersen et al., 2003 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + IL-2 (6) *** | Metastatic melanoma | ECT + IL-2 induced a partial remission | |
| Dog | Salvadori et al., 2017 [ | ECT (cisplatin) + IL-12 GET | Mast cell tumor | Sixty-four percent CR |
| Rabbit | Ramirez et al., 1998 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + IL-2 secreting cells | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Median survival: |
| Mouse | Ursic et al., 2021 [ | ECT (cisplatin/oxaliplatin/bleomycin) + IL-12 GET | Colorectal cancer | ECT (cisplatin/oxaliplatin/bleomycin): 83%/83%/50% CR |
| Tremble et al., 2018 [ | ECT (cisplatin) + inducible T-cell co-stimulator | Colorectal cancer | Median survival: | |
| Cemazar et al., 2015 [ | ECT (cisplatin) + TNF-α | Fibrosarcoma | Control/ECT: 0% CR | |
| Sedlar et al., 2012 [ | ECT (cisplatin) + IL-12 GET | Fibrosarcoma | Control/ECT: 0%/17% CR | |
| Roux et al., 2008 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + CpG oligodeoxynucleotides | Fibrosarcoma | ECT: Recruitment of tumor-infiltrating CD8+ cells 48–96 h after ECT; CD4+ cells remained stable | |
| Torrero et al., 2006 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + IL-12 GET | Breast cancer | Median survival: | |
| Kishida et al., 2003 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + IL-12 GET | Melanoma | Median survival: | |
| Sersa et al., 1997 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + TNF-α | Fibrosarcoma | Median survival: | |
| Mir et al., 1995 [ | ECT (bleomycin) + IL-2 secreting cells | Fibrosarcoma | ECT: 60% CR |
* case report; ** retrospective study; *** prospective study; CR, complete response; ECT, electrochemotherapy; GET, gene electrotransfer; ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; IL, interleukin; OS, overall survival; PR, partial response; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor α.
Summary of IRE + immunotherapy studies.
| Species | Authors | Interventions (n, Study Design) | Cancer Types | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | He et al., 2021 [ | IRE/IRE + toripalimab (70/15) ** | Locally advanced pancreatic cancer | Median OS: 1, 2, and 3 year OS rates: |
| Pan et al., 2020 [ | IRE/IRE + allogenic NK cell transfer (46/46) **** | Locally advanced pancreatic cancer | Median OS: Response rates: | |
| Lin et al., 2020 [ | IRE/IRE + allogenic γδ T cell transfer (32/30) **** | Locally advanced pancreatic cancer | Median OS: | |
| O’Neill et al., 2020 [ | IRE + nivolumab (10) *** | Locally advanced pancreatic cancer | Median OS: 18 months; 1 year OS: 67%. | |
| Yang et al., 2019 [ | IRE/IRE + allogenic NK cell transfer (22/18) **** | Unresectable Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma/hepatocellular carcinoma | Median OS: Response rates: | |
| Alnaggar et al., 2018 [ | IRE/IRE + allogenic NK cell transfer (20/20) ** | Metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma | Median OS: | |
| Lin et al., 2017 [ | IRE/IRE + allogenic NK cell transfer (39/32) *** | Pancreatic cancer (stage III/IV) | Median OS: | |
| Lin et al., 2017 [ | IRE/IRE + allogenic NK cell transfer (19/20) *** | Metastatic pancreatic cancer | IRE: 16% CR, 47% PR | |
| Mouse | Burbach et al., 2021 [ | IRE + anti-CTLA-4 + anti-PD-1 | Prostate cancer | IRE/anti-CTLA-4: 0%/15% CR. |
| Shi et al., 2021 [ | IRE + anti-PD-L1 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | IRE + anti-PD-L1-induced necrosis, T cell and inflammatory cell infiltration in both treated and non-treated tumors. | |
| Babikr et al., 2021 [ | IRE + anti-PD-L1 + TLR3 + TLR9 agonists | Lymphoma | IRE: 0% CR. | |
| Zhang et al., 2021 [ | IRE + anti-OX40 | Pancreatic cancer | Median survival: | |
| Sun et al., 2021 [ | IRE + M1 oncolytic virus | Pancreatic cancer | Median survival: | |
| Yang et al., 2021 [ | IRE + DC vaccine | Pancreatic cancer | Median survival: | |
| Lasarte-Cia et al., 2021 [ | IRE + STING agonist | Melanoma | Control/IRE/STING: 0% CR. | |
| Go et al., 2020 [ | IRE + STING agonist | Lewis lung carcinoma | IRE + STING: Reduced the tumor volume, induced a M1/M2 macrophage balance towards the anti-tumor M1 phenotype, and increased the tumor infiltration of CD8+ and CD4+ T cells compared to IRE or STING alone. | |
| Yu et al., 2020 [ | IRE + indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase inhibitor loaded electric pulse responsive iron-oxide-nanocube clusters | Prostate cancer | Combination treatment induced higher calreticulin tumor exposure, increased frequency of tumor-infiltrating CD3+ T cells, and higher CD8+ T cell-to-Tregs ratio compared to IRE alone. Further, it reduced the tumor growth of both treated and non-treated tumors more than IRE alone. | |
| Narayanan et al., 2019 [ | IRE + TLR7 agonist/anti-PD-1 | Pancreatic cancer | IRE: 20–35% CR in immunocompetent mice; 0% CR in immunodeficient mice. Generated tumor antigen-specific T cell responses. | |
| Zhao et al., 2019 [ | IRE + anti-PD-1 + anti-CTLA-4/radiotherapy + anti-PD-1 | Pancreatic cancer | Median survival: | |
| Vivas et al., 2019 [ | IRE + polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid and poly-L-lysine | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Control/IRE/polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid and poly-L-lysine: 0%/27%/30% CR. | |
| Pasquet et al., 2019 [ | IRE + IL-12 GET | Melanoma | Control/IRE/IL-12 GET: 0% CR. |
** retrospective study; *** prospective study; **** RCT; anti-CTLA-4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 inhibitor; anti-PD-1, programmed death-1 receptor inhibitor; CR, complete response; DC, dendritic cell; GET, gene electrotransfer; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; IRE, irreversible electroporation; MDSC, myeloid-derived suppressor cell; NK, natural killer; OS, overall survival; STING, stimulator of interferon genes; TLR, Toll-like receptor; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; Treg, regulatory T cell.