Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research-KNAW & University Medical Centre Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Oncode Institute, Hubrecht Institute-KNAW, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Elife. 2023 Feb 21;12:e82998. doi: 10.7554/eLife.82998.
Lung cancer (LC) is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Traditional therapeutic approaches such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy have provided only a marginal improvement in the treatment of lung carcinomas. Inhibitors targeting specific genetic aberrations present in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the most common subtype (85%), have improved the prognostic outlook, but due to the complexity of the LC mutational spectrum, only a fraction of patients benefit from these targeted molecular therapies. More recently, the realization that the immune infiltrate surrounding solid tumors can foster tumor-promoting inflammation has led to the development and implementation of anticancer immunotherapies in the clinic. In NSCLC, one of the most abundant leukocyte infiltrates is macrophages. These highly plastic phagocytes, which are part of the cellular repertoire of the innate immunity, can have a pivotal role in early NSCLC establishment, malignant progression, and tumor invasion. Emerging macrophage-targeting therapies have been focused on the re-differentiation of the macrophages toward an antitumorigenic phenotype, depletion of tumor-promoting macrophage subtypes, or combination therapies combining traditional cytotoxic treatments with immunotherapeutic agents. The most extensively used models employed for the exploration of NSCLC biology and therapy have been 2D cell lines and murine models. However, studying cancer immunology requires appropriately complex models. 3D platforms, including organoid models, are quickly advancing powerful tools to study immune cell-epithelial cell interactions within the tumor microenvironment. Co-cultures of immune cells along with NSCLC organoids allow for an in vitro observation of the tumor microenvironment dynamics closely resembling in vivo settings. Ultimately, the implementation of 3D organoid technology into tumor microenvironment-modeling platforms might facilitate the exploration of macrophage-targeted therapies in NSCLC immunotherapeutic research, thus establishing a new frontier in NSCLC treatment.
肺癌(LC)是全球癌症相关死亡的主要原因。化疗或放疗等传统治疗方法仅为治疗非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)提供了微小的改善。针对 NSCLC 中存在的特定遗传异常的抑制剂(最常见的亚型为 85%)改善了预后,但由于 LC 突变谱的复杂性,只有一部分患者受益于这些靶向分子治疗。最近,人们意识到围绕实体瘤的免疫浸润可以促进肿瘤促进炎症,这导致了抗癌免疫疗法在临床上的发展和应用。在 NSCLC 中,最丰富的白细胞浸润之一是巨噬细胞。这些高度可塑性的吞噬细胞是固有免疫细胞库的一部分,在早期 NSCLC 的建立、恶性进展和肿瘤侵袭中可能发挥关键作用。新兴的巨噬细胞靶向治疗集中在使巨噬细胞向抗肿瘤表型重新分化、耗竭促进肿瘤的巨噬细胞亚型,或结合传统细胞毒性治疗与免疫治疗药物的联合治疗上。用于探索 NSCLC 生物学和治疗的最广泛使用的模型是 2D 细胞系和小鼠模型。然而,研究癌症免疫学需要适当复杂的模型。3D 平台,包括类器官模型,正在迅速成为研究肿瘤微环境中免疫细胞与上皮细胞相互作用的强大工具。免疫细胞与 NSCLC 类器官的共培养允许在体外观察与体内环境非常相似的肿瘤微环境动力学。最终,将 3D 类器官技术应用于肿瘤微环境模型平台可能有助于探索 NSCLC 免疫治疗中的巨噬细胞靶向治疗,从而为 NSCLC 治疗开辟新的前沿。