AI Article Synopsis

  • Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) is gaining traction in treating advanced cancer patients, but its effects on the immune system and cancer spread in neoadjuvant settings are not fully understood.
  • Tumors can promote the expansion of regulatory T cells (T), which may inhibit ICB effectiveness and contribute to cancer progression.
  • Research shows that depleting T cells during neoadjuvant ICB boosts the immune response, increases survival related to metastasis, and shows that targeting T cells might improve outcomes without necessarily shrinking the primary tumor.

Article Abstract

The clinical successes of immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in advanced cancer patients have recently spurred the clinical implementation of ICB in the neoadjuvant and perioperative setting. However, how neoadjuvant ICB therapy affects the systemic immune landscape and metastatic spread remains to be established. Tumors promote both local and systemic expansion of regulatory T cells (T), which are key orchestrators of tumor-induced immunosuppression, contributing to immune evasion, tumor progression and metastasis. T express inhibitory immune checkpoint molecules and thus may be unintended targets for ICB therapy counteracting its efficacy. Using ICB-refractory models of spontaneous primary and metastatic breast cancer that recapitulate the poor ICB response of breast cancer patients, we observed that combined anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 therapy inadvertently promotes proliferation and activation of T in the tumor, tumor-draining lymph node and circulation. Also in breast cancer patients, T levels were elevated upon ICB. Depletion of T during neoadjuvant ICB in tumor-bearing mice not only reshaped the intratumoral immune landscape into a state favorable for ICB response but also induced profound and persistent alterations in systemic immunity, characterized by elevated CD8+ T cells and NK cells and durable T cell activation that was maintained after treatment cessation. While depletion of T in combination with neoadjuvant ICB did not inhibit primary tumor growth, it prolonged metastasis-related survival driven predominantly by CD8+ T cells. This study demonstrates that neoadjuvant ICB therapy of breast cancer can be empowered by simultaneous targeting of T extending metastasis-related survival, independent of a primary tumor response.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10114978PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2023.2201147DOI Listing

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