Middle East Journal of Cancer (Jan 2011)
Eradication of Established Murine Skin Tumors by Cyclic Chemoimmunotherapy with Cyclophosphamide and Effector T Cells
Abstract
Background: Nonmyeloablative chemotherapy followed by adoptiveimmunotherapy is an attractive strategy for depleting regulatory T cells in the host. However, its efficacy is transient. Here, we aim to investigate whether cyclic chemoimmunotherapy has therapeutic efficacy against cancer. Methods:We examined the efficacy of cyclic chemoimmunotherapy with cyclophosphamide and adoptively transferred effector T cells against 5-day, established MCA205 murine skin sarcomas. Results: Cyclophosphamide administration followed by adoptive immunotherapy augmented the trafficking of effector T cells into established tumors. Further, multiple cyclophosphamide administrations helped effector T cells to persist at the sites.Chemoimmunotherapy achieved complete tumor regression even with the transfer of a limited number of effector T cells (5×106).Conclusion: Cyclic chemoimmunotherapy, which maintains adoptively transferred T cells by impairing regulatory T cells, is a potentially suitable treatment for established tumors.