AI Article Synopsis

  • Neoadjuvant immunotherapy aims to boost the body's immune response against tumors before surgery, particularly for high-risk, resectable cancers like triple-negative breast cancer.
  • Mice studies indicated that a specific treatment regimen (neo-ISIM) effectively generated tumor-targeting T cells that not only attacked primary tumors but also delayed metastasis to the lungs and improved survival rates.
  • The success of the neo-ISIM approach relies on activating certain immune cells (cDC1s) and shows enhanced effectiveness when combined with other therapies like PD-L1 blockade, highlighting its potential for better cancer treatment outcomes.

Article Abstract

Neoadjuvant immunotherapy, given before surgical resection, is a promising approach to develop systemic antitumor immunity for the treatment of high-risk resectable disease. Here, using syngeneic and orthotopic mouse models of triple-negative breast cancer, we have tested the hypothesis that generation of tumor-specific T-cell responses by induction and activation of tumor-residing Batf3-dependent conventional type 1 dendritic cells (cDC1) before resection improves control of distant metastatic disease and survival. Mice bearing highly metastatic orthotopic tumors were treated with a combinatorial immunomodulation (ISIM) regimen comprised of intratumoral administration of Flt3L, local radiotherapy, and TLR3/CD40 stimulations, followed by surgical resection. Neoadjuvant ISIM (neo-ISIM) generated tumor-specific CD8 T cells that infiltrated into distant nonirradiated metastatic sites, which delayed the progression of lung metastases and improved survival after the resection of primary tumors. The efficacy of neo-ISIM was dependent on adaptive T-cell immunity elicited by Batf3-dependent dendritic cells and was enhanced by increasing dose and fractionation of radiotherapy, and early surgical resection after the completion of neo-ISIM. Importantly, neo-ISIM synergized with programmed cell death protein-1 ligand-1 (PD-L1) blockade to improve control of distant metastases and prolong survival, while removal of tumor-draining lymph nodes abrogated the antimetastatic efficacy of neo-ISIM. Our findings illustrate the therapeutic potential of neoadjuvant multimodal intralesional therapy for the treatment of resectable tumors with high risk of relapse. SIGNIFICANCE: Neoadjuvant induction and activation of cDC1s in primary tumors enhances systemic antitumor immunity, suppresses metastatic progression, improves survival, and synergizes with anti-PD-L1 therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8678344PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-21-0939DOI Listing

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