T Cells Retain Pivotal Antitumoral Functions under Tumor-Treating Electric Fields

Tumor-treating fields (TTFields) are a localized, antitumoral therapy using alternating electric fields, which impair cell proliferation. Combining TTFields with tumor immunotherapy constitutes a rational approach; however, it is currently unknown whether TTFields’ locoregional effects are compatibl...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of immunology (1950) 2021-07, Vol.207 (2), p.709-719
Hauptverfasser: Diamant, Gil, Simchony Goldman, Hadar, Gasri Plotnitsky, Lital, Roitman, Marina, Shiloach, Tamar, Globerson-Levin, Anat, Eshhar, Zelig, Haim, Oz, Pencovich, Niv, Grossman, Rachel, Ram, Zvi, Volovitz, Ilan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tumor-treating fields (TTFields) are a localized, antitumoral therapy using alternating electric fields, which impair cell proliferation. Combining TTFields with tumor immunotherapy constitutes a rational approach; however, it is currently unknown whether TTFields’ locoregional effects are compatible with T cell functionality. Healthy donor PBMCs and viably dissociated human glioblastoma samples were cultured under either standard or TTFields conditions. Select pivotal T cell functions were measured by multiparametric flow cytometry. Cytotoxicity was evaluated using a chimeric Ag receptor (CAR)–T–based assay. Glioblastoma patient samples were acquired before and after standard chemoradiation or standard chemoradiation + TTFields treatment and examined by immunohistochemistry and by RNA sequencing. TTFields reduced the viability of proliferating T cells, but had little or no effect on the viability of nonproliferating T cells. The functionality of T cells cultured under TTFields was retained: they exhibited similar IFN-γ secretion, cytotoxic degranulation, and PD1 upregulation as controls with similar polyfunctional patterns. Glioblastoma Ag–specific T cells exhibited unaltered viability and functionality under TTFields. CAR-T cells cultured under TTFields exhibited similar cytotoxicity as controls toward their CAR target. Transcriptomic analysis of patients’ glioblastoma samples revealed a significant shift in the TTFields-treated versus the standard-treated samples, from a protumoral to an antitumoral immune signature. Immunohistochemistry of samples before and after TTFields treatment showed no reduction in T cell infiltration. T cells were found to retain key antitumoral functions under TTFields settings. Our data provide a mechanistic insight and a rationale for ongoing and future clinical trials that combine TTFields with immunotherapy.
ISSN:0022-1767
1550-6606
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.2100100