Division of Hematology and Oncology, University of Arkansas, Little Rock, Arkansas.
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Arkansas, Little Rock, Arkansas.
Radiat Res. 2020 Dec 1;194(6):688-697. doi: 10.1667/RADE-20-00065.1.
The combination of radiotherapy and immunotherapy may generate synergistic anti-tumor host immune responses and promote abscopal effects. Spatial fractionation of a radiation dose has been found to promote unique physiological responses of tumors, which might promote synergy with immunotherapy. To determine whether spatial fractionation may augment immune activity, whole-tumor or spatial fractionation grid radiation treatment (GRID) alone or in combination with antibodies against immune checkpoints PD1 and CTLA-4 were tested in an immunocompetent mouse model using a triple negative breast tumor (4T1). Tumor growth delay, immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry were used to characterize the effects of each treatment type. Whole-beam radiation with immune checkpoint inhibition significantly restrained tumor growth in the irradiated tumor, but not abscopal tumors, compared to either of these treatments alone. In mice that received spatially fractionated irradiation, evidence of abscopal immune responses were observed in contralateral tumors with markedly enhanced infiltration of both antigen-presenting cells and activated T cells, which were preceded by increased systemic IFNγ production and led to eventual tumor growth delay. These studies suggest that systemic immune activation may be triggered by employing GRID to a primary tumor lesion, promoting anti-tumor immune responses outside the treatment field. Interestingly, PD-L1 was found to be upregulated in abscopal tumors from GRID-treated mice. Combined radio-immunotherapy therapy is becoming a validated and novel approach in the treatment of cancer. With the potential increased benefit of GRID to augment both local and metastatic disease responses, further exploration of GRID treatment as a part of current standards of care is warranted.
放疗和免疫治疗的联合可能会产生协同的抗肿瘤宿主免疫反应,并促进远隔效应。已经发现,放射剂量的空间分割会促进肿瘤产生独特的生理反应,这可能会促进与免疫治疗的协同作用。为了确定空间分割是否可以增强免疫活性,我们在免疫功能正常的小鼠模型中使用三阴性乳腺癌(4T1),单独或联合使用针对免疫检查点 PD1 和 CTLA-4 的抗体,测试了全肿瘤或空间分割网格放疗(GRID)。肿瘤生长延迟、免疫组织化学和流式细胞术用于表征每种治疗类型的效果。与单独使用这些治疗中的任何一种相比,全束照射联合免疫检查点抑制显著抑制了照射肿瘤中的肿瘤生长,但对远隔肿瘤没有抑制作用。在接受空间分割照射的小鼠中,在对侧肿瘤中观察到远隔免疫反应的证据,抗原呈递细胞和活化的 T 细胞明显浸润增加,这是由于全身 IFNγ 产生增加所致,并最终导致肿瘤生长延迟。这些研究表明,通过对原发性肿瘤病变采用 GRID,可能会引发全身性免疫激活,从而促进治疗场以外的抗肿瘤免疫反应。有趣的是,在接受 GRID 治疗的小鼠的远隔肿瘤中发现 PD-L1 上调。放射免疫联合治疗正在成为癌症治疗的一种经过验证的新方法。由于 GRID 可能会增加局部和转移性疾病反应的获益,因此有必要进一步探索 GRID 治疗作为当前护理标准的一部分。