Combined Dendritic Cell Cryotherapy of Tumor Induces Systemic Antimetastatic Immunity
Purpose: Cryotherapy of localized prostate, renal, and hepatic primary tumors and metastases is considered a minimally invasive treatment demonstrating a low complication rate in comparison with conventional surgery. The main drawback of cryotherapy is that it has no systemic effect on distant metas...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2005-07, Vol.11 (13), p.4955-4961 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose: Cryotherapy of localized prostate, renal, and hepatic primary tumors and metastases is considered a minimally invasive treatment
demonstrating a low complication rate in comparison with conventional surgery. The main drawback of cryotherapy is that it
has no systemic effect on distant metastases. We investigated whether intratumoral injections of dendritic cells following
cryotherapy of local tumors (cryoimmunotherapy) provides an improved approach to cancer treatment, combining local tumor destruction
and systemic anticancer immunity.
Experimental Designs: The 3LL murine Lewis lung carcinoma clone D122 and the ovalbumin-transfected B16 melanoma clone MO5 served as models for
spontaneous metastasis. The antimetastatic effect of cryoimmunotherapy was assessed in the lung carcinoma model by monitoring
mouse survival, lung weight, and induction of tumor-specific CTLs. The mechanism of cryoimmunotherapy was elucidated in the
melanoma model using adoptive transfer of T cell receptor transgenic OT-I CTLs into the tumor-bearing mice, and analysis of
Th1/Th2 responses by intracellular cytokine staining in CD4 and CD8 cells.
Results: Cryoimmunotherapy caused robust and tumor-specific CTL responses, increased Th1 responses, significantly prolonged survival
and dramatically reduced lung metastasis. Although intratumor administration of dendritic cells alone increased the proliferation
rate of CD8 cells, only cryoimmunotherapy resulted in the generation of effector memory cells. Furthermore, cryoimmunotherapyprotected
mice that had survived primary MO5 tumors from rechallenge with parental tumors.
Conclusions: These results present cryoimmunotherapy as a novel approach for systemic treatment of cancer. We envisage that cryotherapy
of tumors combined with subsequent in situ immunotherapy by autologous unmodified immature dendritic cells can be applied in practice. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-04-2422 |