Cervera-Carrascon , V , Quixabeira , D C A , Santos , J M , Havunen , R , Milenova , I , Verhoeff , J , Heinio , C , Zafar , S , Garcia-Vallejo , J J , van Beusechem , V W , de Gruijl , T D , Kalervo , A , Sorsa , S , Kanerva , A & Hemminki , A 2021 , ' Adenovirus Armed With TNFa and IL2 Added to aPD-1 Regimen Mediates Antitumor Efficacy in Tumors Refractory to aPD-1 ' , Frontiers in Immunology , vol. 12 , 706517 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.706517
Titel: | Adenovirus Armed With TNFa and IL2 Added to aPD-1 Regimen Mediates Antitumor Efficacy in Tumors Refractory to aPD-1 |
Författare: | Cervera-Carrascon, Victor; Quixabeira, Dafne C. A.; Santos, Joao M.; Havunen, Riikka; Milenova, Ioanna; Verhoeff, Jan; Heinio, Camilla; Zafar, Sadia; Garcia-Vallejo, Juan J.; van Beusechem, Victor W.; de Gruijl, Tanja D.; Kalervo, Aino; Sorsa, Suvi; Kanerva, Anna; Hemminki, Akseli |
Upphovmannens organisation: | Department of Pathology TRIMM - Translational Immunology Research Program Faculty of Medicine Research Programs Unit Medicum HUS Comprehensive Cancer Center Genome-Scale Biology (GSB) Research Program HUS Gynecology and Obstetrics Akseli Eetu Hemminki / Principal Investigator Clinicum Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Department of Oncology |
Datum: | 2021-07-23 |
Språk: | eng |
Sidantal: | 12 |
Tillhör serie: | Frontiers in Immunology |
ISSN: | 1664-3224 |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.706517 |
Permanenta länken (URI): | http://hdl.handle.net/10138/334437 |
Abstrakt: | Immune checkpoint inhibitors such as anti-PD-1 have revolutionized the field of oncology over the past decade. Nevertheless, the majority of patients do not benefit from them. Virotherapy is a flexible tool that can be used to stimulate and/or recruit different immune populations. T-cell enabling virotherapy could enhance the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors, even in tumors resistant to these inhibitors. The T-cell potentiating virotherapy used here consisted of adenoviruses engineered to express tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-2 in the tumor microenvironment. To study virus efficacy in checkpoint-inhibitor resistant tumors, we developed an anti-PD-1 resistant melanoma model in vivo. In resistant tumors, adding virotherapy to an anti-PD-1 regimen resulted in increased survival (p=0.0009), when compared to anti-PD-1 monotherapy. Some of the animals receiving virotherapy displayed complete responses, which did not occur in the immune checkpoint-inhibitor monotherapy group. When adenoviruses were delivered into resistant tumors, there were signs of increased CD8 T-cell infiltration and activation, which - together with a reduced presence of M2 macrophages and myeloid-derived suppressor cells - could explain those results. T-cell enabling virotherapy appeared as a valuable tool to counter resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors. The clinical translation of this approach could increase the number of cancer patients benefiting from immunotherapies. |
Subject: |
cancer immunotherapy
oncolytic virus adenovirus checkpoint inhibitor resistance tumor microenvironment IMMUNE CHECKPOINT INHIBITORS NECROSIS-FACTOR-ALPHA T-CELL THERAPY ACQUIRED-RESISTANCE ONCOLYTIC VIRUSES PD-1 BLOCKADE COMBINATION IMPROVES LANDSCAPE 3111 Biomedicine |
Referentgranskad: | Ja |
Licens: | cc_by |
Användningsbegränsning: | openAccess |
Parallelpublicerad version: | publishedVersion |
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