Author:
Cervera-Carrascon Victor,Quixabeira Dafne C. A.,Santos Joao M.,Havunen Riikka,Milenova Ioanna,Verhoeff Jan,Heiniö Camilla,Zafar Sadia,Garcia-Vallejo Juan J.,van Beusechem Victor W.,de Gruijl Tanja D.,Kalervo Aino,Sorsa Suvi,Kanerva Anna,Hemminki Akseli
Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors such as anti-PD-1 have revolutionized the field of oncology over the past decade. Nevertheless, the majority of patients do not benefit from them. Virotherapy is a flexible tool that can be used to stimulate and/or recruit different immune populations. T-cell enabling virotherapy could enhance the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors, even in tumors resistant to these inhibitors. The T-cell potentiating virotherapy used here consisted of adenoviruses engineered to express tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-2 in the tumor microenvironment. To study virus efficacy in checkpoint-inhibitor resistant tumors, we developed an anti-PD-1 resistant melanoma model in vivo. In resistant tumors, adding virotherapy to an anti-PD-1 regimen resulted in increased survival (p=0.0009), when compared to anti-PD-1 monotherapy. Some of the animals receiving virotherapy displayed complete responses, which did not occur in the immune checkpoint-inhibitor monotherapy group. When adenoviruses were delivered into resistant tumors, there were signs of increased CD8 T-cell infiltration and activation, which - together with a reduced presence of M2 macrophages and myeloid-derived suppressor cells - could explain those results. T-cell enabling virotherapy appeared as a valuable tool to counter resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors. The clinical translation of this approach could increase the number of cancer patients benefiting from immunotherapies.
Funder
Orionin Tutkimussäätiö
Jane ja Aatos Erkon Säätiö
Helsingin ja Uudenmaan Sairaanhoitopiiri
Sigrid Juséliuksen Säätiö
Finnish Cancer Institute
Helsingin Yliopisto
Novo Nordisk Fonden
Päivikki ja Sakari Sohlbergin Säätiö
Suomen Tiedeseura
Horizon 2020
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
16 articles.
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