Journal
BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 96, Issue 12, Pages 1839-1848Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603792
Keywords
PDT; T cells; tumour immunity; NK cells
Categories
Funding
- NCI NIH HHS [CA16056, P01 CA055791, R01 CA098156, P30 CA016056, CA55791, CA98156] Funding Source: Medline
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Cancer survival rates decrease in the presence of disseminated disease. However, there are few therapies that are effective at eliminating the primary tumour while providing control of distant stage disease. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is an FDA-approved modality that rapidly eliminates local tumours, resulting in cure of early disease and palliation of advanced disease. Numerous preclinical studies have shown that local PDT treatment of tumours enhances anti-tumour immunity. We hypothesised that enhancement of a systemic anti-tumour immune response might control the growth of tumours present outside the treatment field. To test this hypothesis we delivered PDT to subcutaneous (s.c.) tumours of mice bearing both s.c. and lung tumours and monitored the growth of the untreated lung tumours. Our results demonstrate that PDT of murine tumours provided durable inhibition of the growth of untreated lung tumours. The inhibition of the growth of tumours outside the treatment field was tumour-specific and dependent on the presence of CD8(+) T cells. This inhibition was accompanied by an increase in splenic anti-tumour cytolytic activity and by an increase in CD8(+) T cell infiltration into untreated tumours. Local PDT treatment led to enhanced anti-tumour immune memory that was evident 40 days after tumour treatment and was independent of CD4(+) T cells. CD8(+) T cell control of the growth of lung tumours present outside the treatment field following PDT was dependent upon the presence of natural killer (NK) cells. These results suggest that local PDT treatment of tumours lead to induction of an anti-tumour immune response capable of controlling the growth of tumours outside the treatment field and indicate that this modality has potential in the treatment of distant stage disease.
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