4.8 Article

Intrapleural nano-immunotherapy promotes innate and adaptive immune responses to enhance anti-PD-L1 therapy for malignant pleural effusion

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NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
卷 17, 期 2, 页码 206-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41565-021-01032-w

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  1. National Cancer Institute [1R01CA264102-01]
  2. Wake Forest Comprehensive Cancer Center [P30 CA01219740]
  3. National Foundation for Cancer Research
  4. Department of Veteran's Affairs [2I01BX002559-07]
  5. National Institutes of Health [1R01CA244212-01A1]

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Malignant pleural effusion (MPE) indicates terminal malignancy with a fatal prognosis. Approaches utilizing liposomal nanoparticles loaded with cyclic dinucleotide show promising results in mitigating immune cold MPE and enhancing checkpoint blockade immunotherapy in both mouse models and clinical samples.
Malignant pleural effusion (MPE) is indicative of terminal malignancy with a uniformly fatal prognosis. Often, two distinct compartments of tumour microenvironment, the effusion and disseminated pleural tumours, co-exist in the pleural cavity, presenting a major challenge for therapeutic interventions and drug delivery. Clinical evidence suggests that MPE comprises abundant tumour-associated myeloid cells with the tumour-promoting phenotype, impairing antitumour immunity. Here we developed a liposomal nanoparticle loaded with cyclic dinucleotide (LNP-CDN) for targeted activation of stimulators of interferon genes signalling in macrophages and dendritic cells and showed that, on intrapleural administration, they induce drastic changes in the transcriptional landscape in MPE, mitigating the immune cold MPE in both effusion and pleural tumours. Moreover, combination immunotherapy with blockade of programmed death ligand 1 potently reduced MPE volume and inhibited tumour growth not only in the pleural cavity but also in the lung parenchyma, conferring significantly prolonged survival of MPE-bearing mice. Furthermore, the LNP-CDN-induced immunological effects were also observed with clinical MPE samples, suggesting the potential of intrapleural LNP-CDN for clinical MPE immunotherapy. Malignant pleural effusion (MPE) is the terminal stage of cancer and the current standard of care for MPE is largely palliative. Here the authors design a liposomal nanoparticle loaded with cyclic dinucleotide for targeted activation of STING signalling in macrophages and dendritic cells and show that, on intrapleural administration, the nanoparticle effectively mitigates the immune cold MPE and significantly augments the checkpoint blockade immunotherapy in a mouse MPE model and clinical patients' samples.

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