OncoImmunology (Dec 2023)

Reprogramming the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment results in successful clearance of tumors resistant to radiation therapy and anti-PD-1/PD-L1

  • Debayan Mukherjee,
  • Erminia Romano,
  • Richard Walshaw,
  • Leo A. H. Zeef,
  • Antonia Banyard,
  • Stephen J. Kitcatt,
  • Eleanor J. Cheadle,
  • Karoliina Tuomela,
  • Swati Pendharkar,
  • Aws Al-Deka,
  • Beatrice Salerno,
  • Sophie Raby,
  • Ian G. Mills,
  • Jamie Honeychurch,
  • Tim M. Illidge

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2023.2223094
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTDespite breakthroughs in immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI), the majority of tumors, including those poorly infiltrated by CD8+ T cells or heavily infiltrated by immunosuppressive immune effector cells, are unlikely to result in clinically meaningful tumor responses. Radiation therapy (RT) has been combined with ICI to potentially overcome this resistance and improve response rates but reported clinical trial results have thus far been disappointing. Novel approaches are required to overcome this resistance and reprogram the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) and address this major unmet clinical need. Using diverse preclinical tumor models of prostate and bladder cancer, including an autochthonous prostate tumor (Pten−/−/trp53−/−) that respond poorly to radiation therapy (RT) and anti-PD-L1 combinations, the key drivers of this resistance within the TME were profiled and used to develop rationalized combination therapies that simultaneously enhance activation of anti-cancer T cell responses and reprogram the immunosuppressive TME. The addition of anti-CD40mAb to RT resulted in an increase in IFN-y signaling, activation of Th−1 pathways with an increased infiltration of CD8+ T-cells and regulatory T-cells with associated activation of the CTLA−4 signaling pathway in the TME. Anti-CTLA−4mAb in combination with RT further reprogrammed the immunosuppressive TME, resulting in durable, long-term tumor control. Our data provide novel insights into the underlying mechanisms of the immunosuppressive TME that result in resistance to RT and anti-PD−1 inhibitors and inform therapeutic approaches to reprogramming the immune contexture in the TME to potentially improve tumor responses and clinical outcomes.

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