AI Article Synopsis

  • Strategies to improve immune recognition of cancer cells have shown benefits, but tumor cells often evade these responses, making cryotherapy alone insufficient for a strong immune reaction.
  • In a study, mice were divided into four groups to assess the effects of combining low-dose total body irradiation with cryotherapy, comparing tumor growth and survival rates.
  • Results indicated that the combination of low-dose irradiation and cryotherapy significantly controlled tumor growth, increased survival times, and enhanced anti-tumor immunity by promoting certain inflammatory factors and boosting effective immune cells while reducing suppressive ones.

Article Abstract

Background: Strategies that restore the immune system's ability to recognize malignant cells have yielded clinical benefits but only in some patients. Tumor cells survive cryotherapy and produce a vast amount of antigens to trigger innate and adaptive responses. However, because tumor cells have developed immune escape mechanisms, cryotherapy alone may not be enough to induce a significant immune response.

Methods: The mice were randomly divided into four groups: Group A: low-dose total body irradiation combined with cryotherapy (L-TBI+cryo); Group B: cryotherapy (cryo); Group C: low-dose total body irradiation(L-TBI); Group D: control group (Control). The tumor growth, recurrence, and survival time of mice in each group were compared and the effects of different treatments on systemic anti-tumor immunity were explored.

Results: L-TBI in conjunction with cryotherapy can effectively control tumor regrowth, inhibit tumor lung metastasis, extend the survival time of mice, and stimulate a long-term protective anti-tumor immune response to resist the re-challenge of tumor cells. The anti-tumor mechanism of this combination therapy may be related to the stimulation of inflammatory factors IFN-γ and IL-2, as well as an increase in immune effector cells (CD8+ T cells) and a decrease in immunosuppressive cells (MDSC, Treg cells) in the spleen or tumor tissue.

Conclusions: We present unique treatment options for enhancing the immune response caused by cryotherapy, pointing to the way forward for cancer treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00432-023-04928-3DOI Listing

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