4.6 Article

Tumor-Specific Inhibition of In Situ Vaccination by Distant Untreated Tumor Sites

Journal

CANCER IMMUNOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 6, Issue 7, Pages 825-834

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-17-0353

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Sari Zirbel Memorial Fund
  2. NIH grants [CA032685, CA87025, CA166105, CA197078, GM067386, UL1TR000427, 1DP5OD024576]
  3. University of Wisconsin ICTR [1TL1RR025013, KL2TR00428]
  4. University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center Core Grant [P30CA014520]
  5. University of Wisconsin UW20/20 grant
  6. University of Wisconsin The Ride Scholar program
  7. Midwest Athletes for Childhood Cancer Fund
  8. Stand Up To Cancer - St. Baldrick's Pediatric Dream Team Translational Research Grant [SU2C-AACR-DT1113]
  9. American Association for Cancer Research, the Scientific Partner of SU2C

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In situ vaccination is an emerging cancer treatment strategy that uses local therapies to stimulate a systemic antitumor immune response. We previously reported an in situ vaccination effect when combining radiation (RT) with intratumor (IT) injection of tumor-specific immunocytokine (IC), a fusion of tumor-specific antibody and IL2 cytokine. In mice bearing two tumors, we initially hypothesized that delivering RT plus IT-IC to the primary tumor would induce a systemic antitumor response causing regression of the secondary tumor. To test this, mice bearing one or two syngeneic murine tumors of B78 melanoma and/or Panc02 pancreatic cancer were treated with combined external beam RT and IT-IC to the designated primary tumor only. Primary and secondary tumor response as well as animal survival were monitored. Immunohistochemistry and quantitative real-time PCR were used to quantify tumor infiltration with regulatory T cells (Treg). Transgenic DEREG mice or IgG2a anti-CTLA-4 were used to transiently deplete tumor Tregs. Contrary to our initial hypothesis, we observed that the presence of an untreated secondary tumor antagonized the therapeutic effect of RT + IT-IC delivered to the primary tumor. We observed reciprocal tumor specificity for this effect, which was circumvented if all tumors received RT or by transient depletion of Tregs. Primary tumor treatment with RT + IT-IC together with systemic administration of Treg-depleting anti-CTLA-4 resulted in a renewedin situvaccination and demonstrate clinically viable approaches to overcome this effect. Untreated tumor sites antagonize the systemic and local antitumor immune response to anin situvaccination regimen. This effect is radiation sensitive and may be mediated by tumor-specific regulatory T cells harbored in the untreated tumor sites. (C) 2018 AACR.

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