Blocking indolamine-2, 3-dioxygenase rebound immune suppression boosts antitumor effects of radio-immunotherapy in murine models and spontaneous canine …

AM Monjazeb, MS Kent, SK Grossenbacher… - Clinical cancer …, 2016 - aacrjournals.org
AM Monjazeb, MS Kent, SK Grossenbacher, C Mall, AE Zamora, A Mirsoian, M Chen, A Kol
Clinical cancer research, 2016aacrjournals.org
Purpose: Previous studies demonstrate that intratumoral CpG immunotherapy in
combination with radiotherapy acts as an in-situ vaccine inducing antitumor immune
responses capable of eradicating systemic disease. Unfortunately, most patients fail to
respond. We hypothesized that immunotherapy can paradoxically upregulate
immunosuppressive pathways, a phenomenon we term “rebound immune suppression,”
limiting clinical responses. We further hypothesized that the immunosuppressive enzyme …
Abstract
Purpose: Previous studies demonstrate that intratumoral CpG immunotherapy in combination with radiotherapy acts as an in-situ vaccine inducing antitumor immune responses capable of eradicating systemic disease. Unfortunately, most patients fail to respond. We hypothesized that immunotherapy can paradoxically upregulate immunosuppressive pathways, a phenomenon we term “rebound immune suppression,” limiting clinical responses. We further hypothesized that the immunosuppressive enzyme indolamine-2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) is a mechanism of rebound immune suppression and that IDO blockade would improve immunotherapy efficacy.
Experimental Design: We examined the efficacy and immunologic effects of a novel triple therapy consisting of local radiotherapy, intratumoral CpG, and systemic IDO blockade in murine models and a pilot canine clinical trial.
Results: In murine models, we observed marked increase in intratumoral IDO expression after treatment with radiotherapy, CpG, or other immunotherapies. The addition of IDO blockade to radiotherapy + CpG decreased IDO activity, reduced tumor growth, and reduced immunosuppressive factors, such as regulatory T cells in the tumor microenvironment. This triple combination induced systemic antitumor effects, decreasing metastases, and improving survival in a CD8+ T-cell–dependent manner. We evaluated this novel triple therapy in a canine clinical trial, because spontaneous canine malignancies closely reflect human cancer. Mirroring our mouse studies, the therapy was well tolerated, reduced intratumoral immunosuppression, and induced robust systemic antitumor effects.
Conclusions: These results suggest that IDO maintains immune suppression in the tumor after therapy, and IDO blockade promotes a local antitumor immune response with systemic consequences. The efficacy and limited toxicity of this strategy are attractive for clinical translation. Clin Cancer Res; 22(17); 4328–40. ©2016 AACR.
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