Journal of Advanced Research (Sep 2022)

Cisplatin and gemcitabine exert opposite effects on immunotherapy with PD-1 antibody in K-ras-driven cancer

  • Christophe Glorieux,
  • Xiaojun Xia,
  • Xin You,
  • Zining Wang,
  • Yi Han,
  • Jing Yang,
  • Gauthier Noppe,
  • Christophe de Meester,
  • Jianhua Ling,
  • Annie Robert,
  • Hui Zhang,
  • Sheng-Ping Li,
  • Huamin Wang,
  • Paul J. Chiao,
  • Li Zhang,
  • Xiaobing Li,
  • Peng Huang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40
pp. 109 – 124

Abstract

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Introduction: Immunochemotherapy using PD-1/PD-L1 antibodies in combination with chemotherapeutic agents has become a mainstream treatment for cancer patients, but it remains unclear which drug combinations would produce best therapeutic outcome. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to investigate two common chemotherapeutic drugs, gemcitabine and cisplatin, for their impacts on the therapeutic efficacy of PD-1 antibody in K-ras-driven cancers known to overexpress PD-L1. Methods: Both in vitro assays and syngeneic mouse tumor models were used in this study. Biochemical and molecular assays were used to determine the effects of drugs on T cell functions in cell culture models and in mouse/human tumor tissues. Allograft tumor models with K-ras mutation were used to investigate the combination effect of gemcitabine or cisplatin with immunotherapy. Data of lung cancer patients with K-ras mutation treated with cisplatin and toripalimab were analyzed to evaluate the clinical relevance of the lab findings. Results: Cisplatin and gemcitabine unexpectedly exert opposite effect on the therapeutic activity of PD-1 antibody in vivo. Gemcitabine antagonizes the therapeutic effect of PD-1 antibody due to its significant inhibition on CD8+ T cell infiltration, which was observed both in mouse tumor allografts and in human pancreatic cancer tissues. In contrast, cisplatin shows synergistic activity with PD-1 antibody by activation of CD8+ T cells through the DNA damage-mediated cGAS-STING sensing mechanism, leading to increase of T cell infiltration and secretion of antitumor cytokines. Clinical data show that a combination of cisplatin with PD-1 antibody toripalimab could be effective in advanced lung cancer patients with K-ras mutation who failed prior therapies. Conclusions: Our study shows that a key factor in selecting chemotherapeutic agents for immunochemotherapy is the drug’s impact on T cell functions, and that cisplatin-based chemotherapy is an excellent choice for combination with immune checkpoint antibody to achieve favorable clinical outcome.

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