Elective nodal irradiation attenuates the combinatorial efficacy of stereotactic radiation therapy and immunotherapy

AE Marciscano, A Ghasemzadeh, TR Nirschl… - Clinical Cancer …, 2018 - AACR
AE Marciscano, A Ghasemzadeh, TR Nirschl, D Theodros, CM Kochel, BJ Francica…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2018AACR
Purpose: In the proper context, radiotherapy can promote antitumor immunity. It is unknown
if elective nodal irradiation (ENI), a strategy that irradiates tumor-associated draining lymph
nodes (DLN), affects adaptive immune responses and combinatorial efficacy of radiotherapy
with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). Experimental Design: We developed a preclinical
model to compare stereotactic radiotherapy (Tumor RT) with or without ENI to examine
immunologic differences between radiotherapy techniques that spare or irradiate the DLN …
Abstract
Purpose: In the proper context, radiotherapy can promote antitumor immunity. It is unknown if elective nodal irradiation (ENI), a strategy that irradiates tumor-associated draining lymph nodes (DLN), affects adaptive immune responses and combinatorial efficacy of radiotherapy with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB).
Experimental Design: We developed a preclinical model to compare stereotactic radiotherapy (Tumor RT) with or without ENI to examine immunologic differences between radiotherapy techniques that spare or irradiate the DLN.
Results: Tumor RT was associated with upregulation of an intratumoral T-cell chemoattractant chemokine signature (CXCR3, CCR5-related) that resulted in robust infiltration of antigen-specific CD8+ effector T cells as well as FoxP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs). The addition of ENI attenuated chemokine expression, restrained immune infiltration, and adversely affected survival when combined with ICB, especially with anti-CLTA4 therapy. The combination of stereotactic radiotherapy and ICB led to long-term survival in a subset of mice and was associated with favorable CD8 effector-to-Treg ratios and increased intratumoral density of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells. Although radiotherapy technique (Tumor RT vs. ENI) affected initial tumor control and survival, the ability to reject tumor upon rechallenge was partially dependent upon the mechanism of action of ICB; as radiotherapy/anti-CTLA4 was superior to radiotherapy/anti-PD-1.
Conclusions: Our results highlight that irradiation of the DLN restrains adaptive immune responses through altered chemokine expression and CD8+ T-cell trafficking. These data have implications for combining radiotherapy and ICB, long-term survival, and induction of immunologic memory. Clinically, the immunomodulatory effect of the radiotherapy strategy should be considered when combining stereotactic radiotherapy with immunotherapy. Clin Cancer Res; 24(20); 5058–71. ©2018 AACR.
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