1. Elective Nodal Irradiation Attenuates the Combinatorial Efficacy of Stereotactic Radiation Therapy and Immunotherapy.
- Author
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Marciscano AE, Ghasemzadeh A, Nirschl TR, Theodros D, Kochel CM, Francica BJ, Muroyama Y, Anders RA, Sharabi AB, Velarde E, Mao W, Chaudhary KR, Chaimowitz MG, Wong J, Selby MJ, Thudium KB, Korman AJ, Ulmert D, Thorek DLJ, DeWeese TL, and Drake CG
- Subjects
- Adoptive Transfer, Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Combined Modality Therapy, Cytokines metabolism, Disease Models, Animal, Humans, Lymph Nodes immunology, Lymph Nodes metabolism, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating immunology, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating metabolism, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating pathology, Melanoma, Experimental, Mice, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms metabolism, Prognosis, T-Cell Antigen Receptor Specificity, T-Lymphocyte Subsets immunology, T-Lymphocyte Subsets metabolism, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays, Immunotherapy methods, Lymph Nodes pathology, Lymph Nodes radiation effects, Neoplasms pathology, Neoplasms therapy, Radiosurgery methods
- Abstract
Purpose: In the proper context, radiotherapy can promote antitumor immunity. It is unknown if elective nodal irradiation (ENI), a strategy that irradiates tumor-associated draining lymph nodes (DLN), affects adaptive immune responses and combinatorial efficacy of radiotherapy with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). Experimental Design: We developed a preclinical model to compare stereotactic radiotherapy (Tumor RT) with or without ENI to examine immunologic differences between radiotherapy techniques that spare or irradiate the DLN. Results: Tumor RT was associated with upregulation of an intratumoral T-cell chemoattractant chemokine signature (CXCR3, CCR5-related) that resulted in robust infiltration of antigen-specific CD8
+ effector T cells as well as FoxP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs). The addition of ENI attenuated chemokine expression, restrained immune infiltration, and adversely affected survival when combined with ICB, especially with anti-CLTA4 therapy. The combination of stereotactic radiotherapy and ICB led to long-term survival in a subset of mice and was associated with favorable CD8 effector-to-Treg ratios and increased intratumoral density of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells. Although radiotherapy technique (Tumor RT vs. ENI) affected initial tumor control and survival, the ability to reject tumor upon rechallenge was partially dependent upon the mechanism of action of ICB; as radiotherapy/anti-CTLA4 was superior to radiotherapy/anti-PD-1. Conclusions: Our results highlight that irradiation of the DLN restrains adaptive immune responses through altered chemokine expression and CD8+ T-cell trafficking. These data have implications for combining radiotherapy and ICB, long-term survival, and induction of immunologic memory. Clinically, the immunomodulatory effect of the radiotherapy strategy should be considered when combining stereotactic radiotherapy with immunotherapy. Clin Cancer Res; 24(20); 5058-71. ©2018 AACR ., (©2018 American Association for Cancer Research.)- Published
- 2018
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