Lung Inflammation Predictors in Combined Immune Checkpoint-Inhibitor and Radiation Therapy-Proof-of-Concept Animal Study.

Biomedicines

Department of Radiation Oncology, Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, 1475 NW 12th Ave., Suite 1500, Miami, FL 33136, USA.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how combining radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors can boost tumor responses while examining the potential side effect of lung inflammation caused by these treatments.
  • Researchers tested this by using a mouse model with Lewis lung carcinoma, monitoring tumor response and lung inflammation through imaging and blood analysis.
  • The results identified specific imaging features that could predict lung inflammation, providing a foundation for developing models that help manage risks associated with this combined cancer therapy.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Combined radiotherapy (RT) and immune checkpoint-inhibitor (ICI) therapy can act synergistically to enhance tumor response beyond what either treatment can achieve alone. Alongside the revolutionary impact of ICIs on cancer therapy, life-threatening potential side effects, such as checkpoint-inhibitor-induced (CIP) pneumonitis, remain underreported and unpredictable. In this preclinical study, we hypothesized that routinely collected data such as imaging, blood counts, and blood cytokine levels can be utilized to build a model that predicts lung inflammation associated with combined RT/ICI therapy.

Materials And Methods: This proof-of-concept investigational work was performed on Lewis lung carcinoma in a syngeneic murine model. Nineteen mice were used, four as untreated controls and the rest subjected to RT/ICI therapy. Tumors were implanted subcutaneously in both flanks and upon reaching volumes of ~200 mm the animals were imaged with both CT and MRI and blood was collected. Quantitative radiomics features were extracted from imaging of both lungs. The animals then received RT to the right flank tumor only with a regimen of three 8 Gy fractions (one fraction per day over 3 days) with PD-1 inhibitor administration delivered intraperitoneally after each daily RT fraction. Tumor volume evolution was followed until tumors reached the maximum size allowed by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC). The animals were sacrificed, and lung tissues harvested for immunohistochemistry evaluation. Tissue biomarkers of lung inflammation (CD45) were tallied, and binary logistic regression analyses were performed to create models predictive of lung inflammation, incorporating pretreatment CT/MRI radiomics, blood counts, and blood cytokines.

Results: The treated animal cohort was dichotomized by the median value of CD45 infiltration in the lungs. Four pretreatment radiomics features (3 CT features and 1 MRI feature) together with pre-treatment neutrophil-to-lymphocyte (NLR) ratio and pre-treatment granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) level correlated with dichotomized CD45 infiltration. Predictive models were created by combining radiomics with NLR and GM-CSF. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses of two-fold internal cross-validation indicated that the predictive model incorporating MR radiomics had an average area under the curve (AUC) of 0.834, while the model incorporating CT radiomics had an AUC of 0.787.

Conclusions: Model building using quantitative imaging data, blood counts, and blood cytokines resulted in lung inflammation prediction models justifying the study hypothesis. The models yielded very-good-to-excellent AUCs of more than 0.78 on internal cross-validation analyses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9138533PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10051173DOI Listing

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