Simultaneously Combined Cancer Cell- and CTLA4-Targeted NIR-PIT Causes a Synergistic Treatment Effect in Syngeneic Mouse Models

Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a new cancer treatment that utilizes antibody-IRDye700DX (IR700) conjugates. The clinical use of NIR-PIT has recently been approved in Japan for patients with inoperable head and neck cancer targeting human epidermal growth factor receptor (hEGFR). Previ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular cancer therapeutics 2021-11, Vol.20 (11), p.2262-2273
Hauptverfasser: Kato, Takuya, Okada, Ryuhei, Furusawa, Aki, Inagaki, Fuyuki, Wakiyama, Hiroaki, Furumoto, Hideyuki, Okuyama, Shuhei, Fukushima, Hiroshi, Choyke, Peter L, Kobayashi, Hisataka
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a new cancer treatment that utilizes antibody-IRDye700DX (IR700) conjugates. The clinical use of NIR-PIT has recently been approved in Japan for patients with inoperable head and neck cancer targeting human epidermal growth factor receptor (hEGFR). Previously, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA4)-targeted NIR-PIT has been shown to strongly inhibit tumor progression and prolonged survival was seen in different tumor models due to enhanced T-cell-mediated antitumor immunity. In this study, combined NIR-PIT targeting CTLA4 expressing cells and cancer cells was investigated in four tumor models including a newly established hEGFR-expressing murine oropharyngeal cancer cell (mEERL-hEGFR). While single molecule-targeted therapy (NIR-PIT targeting hEGFR or CTLA4) did not inhibit tumor progression in poorly immunogenic mEERL-hEGFR tumor, dual (CTLA4/hEGFR)-targeted NIR-PIT significantly suppressed tumor growth and prolonged survival resulting in a 38% complete response rate. After the dual-targeted NIR-PIT, depletion of CTLA4 expressing cells, which were mainly regulatory T cells (Tregs), and an increase in the CD8 /Treg ratio in the tumor bed were observed, suggesting enhanced host antitumor immunity. Furthermore, dual-targeted NIR-PIT showed antitumor immunity in distant untreated tumors of the same type. Thus, simultaneous cancer cell-targeted NIR-PIT and CTLA4-targeted NIR-PIT is a promising new cancer therapy strategy, especially in poorly immunogenic tumors where NIR-PIT monotherapy is suboptimal.
ISSN:1535-7163
1538-8514
DOI:10.1158/1535-7163.mct-21-0470