Harris Timothy J, Hipkiss Edward L, Borzillary Scott, Wada Satoshi, Grosso Joseph F, Yen Hung-Rong, Getnet Derese, Bruno Tullia C, Goldberg Monica V, Pardoll Drew M, DeWeese Theodore L, Drake Charles G
Department of Oncology, Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21231, USA.
Prostate. 2008 Sep 1;68(12):1319-29. doi: 10.1002/pros.20794.
Cancer immunotherapy refers to an array of strategies intended to treat progressive tumors by augmenting a patient's anti-tumor immune response. As immunotherapy is eventually incorporated into oncology treatment paradigms, it is important to understand how these therapies interact with established cancer treatments such as chemotherapy or Radiotherapy (RT). To address this, we utilized a well-established, autochthonous murine model of prostate cancer to test whether RT could augment (or diminish) the CD4 T cell response to a tumor vaccine.
Transgenic mice that develop spontaneous prostate cancer (TRAMP) which also express a unique tumor associated antigen (Influenza hemagglutinin) under the control of a prostate-specific promoter were given local RT in combination with immunotherapy. The immunological outcome of this combinatorial strategy was assayed by monitoring the effector response of adoptively transferred, prostate-specific CD4 T cells.
Neither RT nor immunotherapy alone was capable of priming an anti-tumor immune response in animals with evolving tumors. The combination of immunotherapy with RT resulted in anti-tumor T cell activation--this effect was profoundly dependent on the relative timing of RT and immunotherapy. Anti-tumor immune responses occurred when immunotherapy was administered 3-5 weeks post-RT, but such responses were undetectable when immunotherapy was administered either earlier (peri-radiotherapy) or later.
The therapeutic temporal window of immunotherapy post-RT suggests that highly aggressive, immuno-suppressive tumors might be most sensitive to immunotherapy in a fairly narrow time window; these results should help to guide future development of clinical combinatorial strategies.
癌症免疫疗法是指一系列旨在通过增强患者的抗肿瘤免疫反应来治疗进展性肿瘤的策略。随着免疫疗法最终被纳入肿瘤治疗模式,了解这些疗法如何与化疗或放疗(RT)等既定的癌症治疗方法相互作用非常重要。为了解决这个问题,我们利用一种成熟的、自发的前列腺癌小鼠模型来测试放疗是否可以增强(或减弱)对肿瘤疫苗的CD4 T细胞反应。
将自发发生前列腺癌(TRAMP)且在前列腺特异性启动子控制下还表达一种独特的肿瘤相关抗原(流感血凝素)的转基因小鼠给予局部放疗并结合免疫疗法。通过监测过继转移的前列腺特异性CD4 T细胞的效应反应来测定这种联合策略的免疫结果。
单独的放疗或免疫疗法都不能在肿瘤不断发展的动物中引发抗肿瘤免疫反应。免疫疗法与放疗的联合导致抗肿瘤T细胞活化——这种效应在很大程度上取决于放疗和免疫疗法的相对时间。当放疗后3 - 5周给予免疫疗法时会出现抗肿瘤免疫反应,但当免疫疗法在更早(放疗期间)或更晚给予时则检测不到这种反应。
放疗后免疫疗法的治疗时间窗表明,高度侵袭性、免疫抑制性肿瘤可能在相当窄的时间窗内对免疫疗法最敏感;这些结果应有助于指导未来临床联合策略的开发。