110 results on '"Morris ZS"'
Search Results
2. Developing an index of capability for older people: A new form of measure for public health interventions?
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Dawson, S, Morris, ZS, Coast, J, Flynn, TN, Grewal, I, Lewis, J, Natarajan, L, Sproston, K, Peters, T, Dawson, S, Morris, ZS, Coast, J, Flynn, TN, Grewal, I, Lewis, J, Natarajan, L, Sproston, K, and Peters, T
- Abstract
NA
- Published
- 2009
3. Developing an Index of Capability for Older People: A New Form of Measure for Public Health Interventions?
- Author
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Lucy Natarajan, Terry N. Flynn, Ini Grewal, Joanna Coast, Jane Lewis, Kerry Sproston, Tim J Peters, Dawson, S, and Morris, ZS
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Gerontology ,Public economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychological intervention ,Nice ,Health promotion ,Willingness to pay ,Excellence ,Political science ,Economic evaluation ,Capability approach ,computer ,Health policy ,media_common ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Economic evaluation requires monetary measures or a single outcome for use across all interventions to assist decisions about service provision. Monetary values can be estimated through willingness to pay methods but there are difficulties, with few analyses successfully using these methods to value all outcomes (Drummond et al., 2005). Instead, economic evaluation most often uses a single outcome. The quality-adjusted life-year (QALY), as recommended by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) in the UK (NICE, 2004), has become the dominant measure within economic evaluation. QALYs may be formed from a number of different measures, including the EQ-5D (Brooks, 1996), the SF-36 (Brazier et al., 2002) and the Health Utility Index (Horsman et al., 2003), but all focus entirely on health as the outcome of interest. The majority of analyses in the UK are currently conducted using EQ-5D, a measure with five dimensions (mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression) each with three levels (Brooks, 1996).
- Published
- 2009
4. From Bench to Bedside: A Team's Approach to Multidisciplinary Strategies to Combat Therapeutic Resistance in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma.
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Crossman BE, Harmon RL, Kostecki KL, McDaniel NK, Iida M, Corday LW, Glitchev CE, Crow MT, Harris MA, Lin CY, Adams JM, Longhurst CA, Nickel KP, Ong IM, Alexandridis RA, Yu M, Yang DT, Hu R, Morris ZS, Hartig GK, Glazer TA, Ramisetty S, Kulkarni P, Salgia R, Kimple RJ, Bruce JY, Harari PM, and Wheeler DL
- Abstract
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is diagnosed in more than 71,000 patients each year in the United States, with nearly 16,000 associated deaths. One significant hurdle in the treatment of HNSCC is acquired and intrinsic resistance to existing therapeutic agents. Over the past several decades, the University of Wisconsin has formed a multidisciplinary team to move basic scientific discovery along the translational spectrum to impact the lives of HNSCC patients. In this review, we outline key discoveries made throughout the years at the University of Wisconsin to deepen our understanding of therapeutic resistance in HNSCC and how a strong, interdisciplinary team can make significant advances toward improving the lives of these patients by combatting resistance to established therapeutic modalities. We are profoundly grateful to the many scientific teams worldwide whose groundbreaking discoveries, alongside evolving clinical paradigms in head and neck oncology, have been instrumental in making our work possible.
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- 2024
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5. Clinical cell-surface targets in metastatic and primary solid cancers.
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Sharifi MN, Shi Y, Chrostek MR, Callahan SC, Shang T, Berg TJ, Helzer KT, Bootsma ML, Sjöström M, Josefsson A, Feng FY, Huffman LB, Schulte C, Blitzer GC, Sodji QH, Morris ZS, Ma VT, Meimetis L, Kosoff D, Taylor AK, LeBeau AM, Lang JM, and Zhao SG
- Subjects
- Humans, Cell Line, Tumor, Single-Cell Analysis methods, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Molecular Targeted Therapy, RNA-Seq, Neoplasms pathology, Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasm Metastasis
- Abstract
Therapies against cell-surface targets (CSTs) represent an emerging treatment class in solid malignancies. However, high-throughput investigations of CST expression across cancer types have been reliant on data sets of mostly primary tumors, despite therapeutic use most commonly in metastatic disease. We identified a total of 818 clinical trials of CST therapies with 78 CSTs. We assembled a data set spanning RNA-seq and microarrays in 7,927 benign samples, 16,866 primary tumor samples, and 6,124 metastatic tumor samples. We also utilized single-cell RNA-seq data from 36 benign tissues and 558 primary and metastatic tumor samples, and matched RNA versus protein expression in 29 benign tissue samples, 1,075 tumor samples, and 942 cell lines. High RNA expression accurately predicted high protein expression across CST therapies in benign tissues, tumor samples, and cell lines. We compared metastatic versus primary tumor expression, identified potential opportunities for repositioning, and matched cell lines to tumor types based on CST and global RNA expression. We evaluated single-cell heterogeneity across tumors, and identified rare normal cell subpopulations that may contribute to toxicity. Finally, we identified combinations of CST therapies for which bispecific approaches could improve tumor specificity. This study helps better define the landscape of CST expression in metastatic and primary cancers.
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- 2024
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6. Intratumoral radiation dose heterogeneity augments antitumor immunity in mice and primes responses to checkpoint blockade.
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Jagodinsky JC, Vera JM, Jin WJ, Shea AG, Clark PA, Sriramaneni RN, Havighurst TC, Chakravarthy I, Allawi RH, Kim K, Harari PM, Sondel PM, Newton MA, Crittenden MR, Gough MJ, Miller JR, Ong IM, and Morris ZS
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- Animals, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Cell Line, Tumor, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Female, Immunity radiation effects, Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms radiotherapy, Neoplasms therapy, Neoplasms pathology, Tumor Microenvironment immunology, Tumor Microenvironment radiation effects, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors pharmacology, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors therapeutic use
- Abstract
Radiation therapy (RT) activates multiple immunologic effects in the tumor microenvironment (TME), with diverse dose-response relationships observed. We hypothesized that, in contrast with homogeneous RT, a heterogeneous RT dose would simultaneously optimize activation of multiple immunogenic effects in a single TME, resulting in a more effective antitumor immune response. Using high-dose-rate brachytherapy, we treated mice bearing syngeneic tumors with a single fraction of heterogeneous RT at a dose ranging from 2 to 30 gray. When combined with dual immune checkpoint inhibition in murine models, heterogeneous RT generated more potent antitumor responses in distant, nonirradiated tumors compared with any homogeneous dose. The antitumor effect after heterogeneous RT required CD4 and CD8 T cells and low-dose RT to a portion of the tumor. At the 3-day post-RT time point, dose heterogeneity imprinted the targeted TME with spatial differences in immune-related gene expression, antigen presentation, and susceptibility of tumor cells to immune-mediated destruction. At a later 10-day post-RT time point, high-, moderate-, or low-RT-dose regions demonstrated distinct infiltrating immune cell populations. This was associated with an increase in the expression of effector-associated cytokines in circulating CD8 T cells. Consistent with enhanced adaptive immune priming, heterogeneous RT promoted clonal expansion of effector CD8 T cells. These findings illuminate the breadth of dose-dependent effects of RT on the TME and the capacity of heterogeneous RT to promote antitumor immunity when combined with immune checkpoint inhibitors.
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- 2024
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7. Administration of intratumoral GD2-directed interleukin-2 immunocytokine and local radiation therapy to activate immune rejection of spontaneous canine melanoma.
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Albertini MR, Zuleger CL, Ranheim EA, Shiyanbola O, Sondel PM, Morris ZS, Eickhoff J, Newton MA, Ong IM, Schwartz RW, Hayim R, Kurzman ID, Turek M, and Vail DM
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- Dogs, Animals, Skin Neoplasms radiotherapy, Skin Neoplasms immunology, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Female, Male, Melanoma radiotherapy, Melanoma immunology, Melanoma pathology, Interleukin-2, Dog Diseases radiotherapy, Dog Diseases immunology
- Abstract
Canine malignant melanoma provides a clinically relevant, large animal parallel patient population to study the GD2-reactive hu14.18-IL-2 immunocytokine as it is similar to human melanoma and expresses GD2. The objectives of this study were to evaluate safety, radiation fractionation, and identify informative biomarkers of an in-situ tumor vaccine involving local radiation therapy plus intratumoral-immunocytokine in melanoma tumor-bearing dogs. Twelve dogs (six dogs/arm) with locally advanced or metastatic melanoma were randomized to receive a single 8 Gy fraction (arm A) or three 8 Gy fractions over 1 week (arm B) to the primary site and regional lymph nodes (when clinically involved) with the single or last fraction 5 days before intratumoral-immunocytokine at 12 mg/m 2 on 3 consecutive days. Serial tumor biopsies were obtained. All 12 dogs completed protocol treatment, and none experienced significant or unexpected adverse events. Evidence of antitumor activity includes one dog with a complete response at day 60, one dog with a partial response at day 60, and four dogs with mixed responses. Histology of serial biopsies shows a variably timed increase in intratumoral lymphocytic inflammation in some dogs. Canine NanoString analyses of serial biopsies identified changes in gene signatures of innate and adaptive cell types versus baseline. There were no significant differences in NanoString results between arm A and arm B. We conclude that intratumoral-immunocytokine in combination with local radiation therapy in canine melanoma is well tolerated and has antitumor activity with the potential to inform clinical development in melanoma patients., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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8. Effects of clinically relevant radionuclides on the activation of a type I interferon response by radiopharmaceuticals in syngeneic murine tumor models.
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Kerr CP, Sheehan-Klenk J, Grudzinski JJ, Adam DP, Nguyen TPT, Ferreira CA, Bates AM, Jin WJ, Kwon O, Olson AP, Lin W, Hyun M, Jagodinsky JC, Powers M, Sriramaneni RN, Clark PA, Shea AG, Rojas HC, Choi C, Massey CF, Zangl LM, Pinchuk AN, Aluicio-Sarduy E, Kim K, Engle JW, Hernandez R, Bednarz BP, Weichert JP, and Morris ZS
- Abstract
Radiopharmaceutical therapies (RPT) activate a type I interferon (IFN1) response in tumor cells. We hypothesized that the timing and amplitude of this response varies by isotope. We compared equal doses delivered by
90 Y,177 Lu, and225 Ac in vitro as unbound radionuclides and in vivo when chelated to NM600, a tumor-selective alkylphosphocholine. Response in murine MOC2 head and neck carcinoma and B78 melanoma was evaluated by qPCR and flow cytometry. Therapeutic response to225 Ac-NM600+anti-CTLA4+anti-PD-L1 immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) was evaluated in wild-type and stimulator of interferon genes knockout (STING KO) B78. The timing and magnitude of IFN1 response correlated with radionuclide half-life and linear energy transfer. CD8+ /Treg ratios increased in tumors 7 days after90 Y- and177 Lu-NM600 and day 21 after225 Ac-NM600.225 Ac-NM600+ICI improved survival in mice with WT but not with STING KO tumors, relative to monotherapies. Immunomodulatory effects of RPT vary with radioisotope and promote STING-dependent enhanced response to ICIs in murine models., Teaser: This study describes the time course and nature of tumor immunomodulation by radiopharmaceuticals with differing physical properties.- Published
- 2024
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9. A combined radio-immunotherapy regimen eradicates late-stage tumors in mice.
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Rakhmilevich AL, Tsarovsky NW, Felder M, Zaborek J, Moram S, Erbe AK, Pieper AA, Spiegelman DV, Cheng EM, Witt CM, Overwijk WW, Morris ZS, and Sondel PM
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- Animals, Mice, Cell Line, Tumor, Female, Combined Modality Therapy, Mice, Inbred C57BL, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology, Interleukin-12, CTLA-4 Antigen antagonists & inhibitors, CTLA-4 Antigen immunology, Radioimmunotherapy methods, Interleukin-2, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Immunologic Memory, Neoplasm Staging, Colonic Neoplasms therapy, Colonic Neoplasms immunology, Colonic Neoplasms pathology, Immunotherapy methods
- Abstract
Background: The majority of experimental approaches for cancer immunotherapy are tested against relatively small tumors in tumor-bearing mice, because in most cases advanced cancers are resistant to the treatments. In this study, we asked if even late-stage mouse tumors can be eradicated by a rationally designed combined radio-immunotherapy (CRI) regimen., Methods: CRI consisted of local radiotherapy, intratumoral IL-12, slow-release systemic IL-2 and anti- CTLA-4 antibody. Therapeutic effects of CRI against several weakly immunogenic and immunogenic mouse tumors including B78 melanoma, MC38 and CT26 colon carcinomas and 9464D neuroblastoma were evaluated. Immune cell depletion and flow cytometric analysis were performed to determine the mechanisms of the antitumor effects., Results: Tumors with volumes of 2,000 mm
3 or larger were eradicated by CRI. Flow analyses of the tumors revealed reduction of T regulatory (Treg) cells and increase of CD8/Treg ratios following CRI. Rapid shrinkage of the treated tumors did not require T cells, whereas T cells were involved in the systemic effect against the distant tumors. Cured mice developed immunological memory., Conclusions: These findings underscore that rationally designed combination immunotherapy regimens can be effective even against large, late-stage tumors., Competing Interests: Author WO was formerly employed by the company Nektar Therapeutics. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Rakhmilevich, Tsarovsky, Felder, Zaborek, Moram, Erbe, Pieper, Spiegelman, Cheng, Witt, Overwijk, Morris and Sondel.)- Published
- 2024
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10. Variation and Variability in Skeletal Ossification of the Gray Short-tailed Opossum, Monodelphis domestica .
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Morris ZS, Colbert MW, and Rowe TB
- Abstract
By reconstructing and comparing the sequence of ontogenetic (embryonic development and post-natal growth) events across species, developmental biologists have gained unique insights into the key processes underlying the evolution of modern lineages and their extinct relatives. However, despite the importance of intraspecific variation to evolutionary transformation and lineage divergence, variation in the sequence of developmental events is seldom acknowledged. Thus, how much variation or variability should be expected during ontogeny remains poorly understood and it is an open question to what extent it impacts interspecific comparisons of developmental patterns. To address this crucial question, we studied the skeletal development of the important biomedical and developmental model organism, Monodelphis domestica . We investigated cranial, forelimb, and hindlimb elements using ontogenetic sequence analysis (OSA) to quantify and assess the full range of variation and variability in the sequence of ossification. Our study documented that previously unrecognized variation exists during M. domestica ontogeny-with over 5000 sequences for the full 92 event analysis. Further, OSA revealed unexpectedly high variability (i.e., the propensity to express variation) in the sequence of ossification for the skull and across the entire skeleton. Reconstructed modal sequences were generally in agreement with previously recognized patterns, including earlier ossification of the facial skeleton and a slight offset between forelimb and hindlimb development. However, the full range of variation shows that the majority of specimens in our analysis followed developmental trajectories distinct from those recovered by prior studies. This level of variation is quite remarkable and demonstrates the importance of assessing intraspecific ontogenetic variation. By quantifying sequence polymorphism and studying how developmental variation and variability differ among species, we can clarify more precisely how developmental patterns differ among species and gain insights into how ontogeny itself evolves., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing or conflicting interests., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.)
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- 2024
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11. The Effects of Radiation Dose Heterogeneity on the Tumor Microenvironment and Anti-Tumor Immunity.
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Takashima ME, Berg TJ, and Morris ZS
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- Humans, Radiotherapy Dosage, Immunotherapy methods, Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation, Animals, Tumor Microenvironment immunology, Tumor Microenvironment radiation effects, Neoplasms radiotherapy, Neoplasms immunology
- Abstract
Radiotherapy elicits dose- and lineage-dependent effects on immune cell survival, migration, activation, and proliferation in targeted tumor microenvironments. Radiation also stimulates phenotypic changes that modulate the immune susceptibility of tumor cells. This has raised interest in using radiotherapy to promote greater response to immunotherapies. To clarify the potential of such combinations, it is critical to understand how best to administer radiation therapy to achieve activation of desired immunologic mechanisms. In considering the multifaceted process of priming and propagating anti-tumor immune response, radiation dose heterogeneity emerges as a potential means for simultaneously engaging diverse dose-dependent effects in a single tumor environment. Recent work in spatially fractionated external beam radiation therapy demonstrates the expansive immune responses achievable when a range of high to low dose radiation is delivered in a tumor. Brachytherapy and radiopharmaceutical therapies deliver inherently heterogeneous distributions of radiation that may contribute to immunogenicity. This review evaluates the interplay of radiation dose and anti-tumor immune response and explores emerging methodological approaches for investigating the effects of heterogeneous dose distribution on immune responses., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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12. Myeloid-derived suppressor cells attenuate the antitumor efficacy of radiopharmaceutical therapy using 90 Y-NM600 in combination with androgen deprivation therapy in murine prostate tumors.
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Muralidhar A, Hernandez R, Morris ZS, Comas Rojas H, Bio Idrissou M, Weichert JP, and McNeel DG
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- Animals, Male, Mice, Radiopharmaceuticals therapeutic use, Radiopharmaceuticals pharmacology, Humans, Cell Line, Tumor, Yttrium Radioisotopes therapeutic use, Yttrium Radioisotopes pharmacology, Disease Models, Animal, Androgen Antagonists therapeutic use, Androgen Antagonists pharmacology, Combined Modality Therapy, Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells drug effects, Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells metabolism, Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells immunology, Prostatic Neoplasms drug therapy, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Rationale: Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) is pivotal in treating recurrent prostate cancer and is often combined with external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) for localized disease. However, for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, EBRT is typically only used in the palliative setting, because of the inability to radiate all sites of disease. Systemic radiation treatments that preferentially irradiate cancer cells, known as radiopharmaceutical therapy or targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT), have demonstrable benefits for treating metastatic prostate cancer. Here, we explored the use of a novel TRT,
90 Y-NM600, specifically in combination with ADT, in murine prostate tumor models., Methods: 6-week-old male FVB mice were implanted subcutaneously with Myc-CaP tumor cells and given a single intravenous injection of90 Y-NM600, in combination with ADT (degarelix). The combination and sequence of administration were evaluated for effect on tumor growth and infiltrating immune populations were analyzed by flow cytometry. Sera were assessed to determine treatment effects on cytokine profiles., Results: ADT delivered prior to TRT (ADT→TRT) resulted in significantly greater antitumor response and overall survival than if delivered after TRT (TRT→ADT). Studies conducted in immunodeficient NRG mice failed to show a difference in treatment sequence, suggesting an immunological mechanism. Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) significantly accumulated in tumors following TRT→ADT treatment and retained immune suppressive function. However, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells with an activated and memory phenotype were more prevalent in the ADT→TRT group. Depletion of Gr1+MDSCs led to greater antitumor response following either treatment sequence. Chemotaxis assays suggested that tumor cells secreted chemokines that recruited MDSCs, notably CXCL1 and CXCL2. The use of a selective CXCR2 antagonist, reparixin, further improved antitumor responses and overall survival when used in tumor-bearing mice treated with TRT→ADT., Conclusion: The combination of ADT and TRT improved antitumor responses in murine models of prostate cancer, however, this was dependent on the order of administration. This was found to be associated with one treatment sequence leading to an increase in infiltrating MDSCs. Combining treatment with a CXCR2 antagonist improved the antitumor effect of this combination, suggesting a possible approach for treating advanced human prostate cancer., Competing Interests: Competing interests: JPW is a co-founder and Senior Science Advisor for Archeus Technologies, which holds the license rights to NM600-related technologies. ZSM and RH have financial interest in Archeus Technologies. HCR has served as a consultant for Archeus Technologies. ZSM is a member of the Scientific Advisory Boards for Archeus Technologies, Seneca Therapeutics, and NorthStar Medical Isotopes. ZSM is an inventor on patents or filed patents managed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation relating to immunotherapies and the interaction of targeted radionuclide therapies and immunotherapies. The other authors have no relevant potential conflicts of interest., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2024
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13. Immunological effects of radiopharmaceutical therapy.
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Shea AG, Idrissou MB, Torres AI, Chen T, Hernandez R, Morris ZS, and Sodji QH
- Abstract
Radiation therapy (RT) is a pillar of cancer therapy used by more than half of all cancer patients. Clinically, RT is mostly delivered as external beam radiation therapy (EBRT). However, the scope of EBRT is limited in the metastatic setting, where all sites of disease need to be irradiated. Such a limitation is attributed to radiation-induced toxicities, for example on bone marrow and hematologic toxicities, resulting from a large EBRT field. Radiopharmaceutical therapy (RPT) has emerged as an alternative to EBRT for the irradiation of all sites of metastatic disease. While RPT can reduce tumor burden, it can also impact the immune system and anti-tumor immunity. Understanding these effects is crucial for predicting and managing treatment-related hematological toxicities and optimizing their integration with other therapeutic modalities, such as immunotherapies. Here, we review the immunomodulatory effects of α- and β-particle emitter-based RPT on various immune cell lines, such as CD8+ and CD4+ T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, and regulatory T (Treg) cells. We briefly discuss Auger electron-emitter (AEE)-based RPT, and finally, we highlight the combination of RPT with immune checkpoint inhibitors, which may offer potential therapeutic synergies for patients with metastatic cancers., Competing Interests: RH received patent royalties from the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation and consulting fees from Archeus Technologies Inc. and Monopar Therapeutics. ZSM is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board for Archeus Technologies, Seneca Therapeutics, and NorthStar Medical Isotopes; received royalties from patents held by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation; received stock/stock options from the Archeus Technologies Scientific Advisory Board and the Seneca Therapeutics Scientific Advisory Board; received research support from Point Biopharma, Telix Pharmaceuticals, and XRD Therapeutics. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationship that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were editorial board members of Frontiers at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (© 2024 Shea, Idrissou, Torres, Chen, Hernandez, Morris and Sodji.)
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- 2024
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14. ACR-ACNM-ARS-ASTRO-SNMMI Practice Parameter for the Performance of Therapy With Radiopharmaceuticals.
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Wallner PE, Yoo DC, Calais J, Escorcia FE, Mari Aparici C, Michalski J, Morris M, Morris ZS, Pryma D, Rabatic BM, Sharma N, Vapiwala N, Ghesani MV, Subramaniam RM, Small W Jr, and Schechter NR
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- Humans, Radiopharmaceuticals therapeutic use, Radioisotopes, Radium, Radiation Oncology
- Abstract
Objectives: This practice parameter was revised collaboratively by the American College of Radiology (ACR), the American College of Nuclear Medicine, the American Radium Society, the American Society for Radiation Oncology, and the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging. The document is intended to serve as a resource for appropriately trained and licensed physicians who perform therapeutic procedures with unsealed sources, referred to in the document using the more inclusive terminology of radiopharmaceuticals, for which a written directive is required for authorized users under NRC 10 CFR 35.300., Methods: This practice parameter was developed according to the process described under the heading The Process for Developing ACR Practice Parameters and Technical Standards on the ACR website ( https://www.acr.org/Clinical-Resources/Practice-Parameters-and-Technical-Standards ) by the Committee on Practice Parameters-Radiation Oncology of the ACR Commission on Radiation Oncology in collaboration with the American Radium Society., Results: This practice parameter addresses the overall role of the applicable physician-authorized user, Qualified Medical Physicist, and other specialized personnel involved in the delivery of radiopharmaceutical therapy. Therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals include those administered as elemental radioactive isotopes (radionuclides) or the radioactive element incorporated into a targeting molecule (ligand) by one or more chemical bonds. This document provides guidance regarding general principles of radionuclide therapies and indications of various alpha, beta, gamma, and mixed emission agents with references to several recent practice parameters on new and commonly performed radiopharmaceutical therapies., Conclusion: This document addresses clinical circumstances, elements of available agents, and the qualifications and responsibilities of various members of the radiation care team, specifications of consultation and other clinical documentation, post-therapy follow-up, radiation safety precautions, elements of quality control and improvement programs, infection control, and patient education to ensure optimal patient care and safety when utilizing radiopharmaceuticals., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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15. Combining Dual Checkpoint Immunotherapy with Ablative Radiation to All Sites of Oligometastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: Toxicity and Efficacy Results of a Phase 1b Trial.
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Bassetti MF, Morris BA, Sethakorn N, Lang JM, Schehr JL, Zhao SG, Morris ZS, Buehler D, Eickhoff JC, Harari PM, Traynor AM, Campbell TC, Baschnagel AM, and Leal TA
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- Humans, Pandemics, Treatment Outcome, Immunotherapy adverse effects, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung radiotherapy, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung drug therapy, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy, Lung Neoplasms drug therapy, Radiosurgery adverse effects, Radiosurgery methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Ablative local treatment of all radiographically detected metastatic sites in patients with oligometastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) increases progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Prior studies demonstrated the safety of combining stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) with single-agent immunotherapy. We investigated the safety of combining SBRT to all metastatic tumor sites with dual checkpoint, anticytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (anti-CTLA-4), and anti-programmed cell death ligand 1 (anti-PD-L1) immunotherapy for patients with oligometastatic NSCLC., Methods and Materials: We conducted a phase 1b clinical trial in patients with oligometastatic NSCLC with up to 6 sites of extracranial metastatic disease. All sites of disease were treated with SBRT to a dose of 30 to 50 Gy in 5 fractions. Dual checkpoint immunotherapy was started 7 days after completion of radiation using anti-CTLA-4 (tremelimumab) and anti-PD-L1 (durvalumab) immunotherapy for a total of 4 cycles followed by durvalumab alone until progression or toxicity., Results: Of the 17 patients enrolled in this study, 15 patients received at least 1 dose of combination immunotherapy per protocol. The study was closed early (17 of planned 21 patients) due to slow accrual during the COVID-19 pandemic. Grade 3+ treatment-related adverse events were observed in 6 patients (40%), of which only one was possibly related to the addition of SBRT to immunotherapy. Median PFS was 42 months and median OS has not yet been reached., Conclusions: Delivering ablative SBRT to all sites of metastatic disease in combination with dual checkpoint immunotherapy did not result in excessive rates of toxicity compared with historical studies of dual checkpoint immunotherapy alone. Although the study was not powered for treatment efficacy results, durable PFS and OS results suggest potential therapeutic benefit compared with immunotherapy or radiation alone in this patient population., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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16. Functionality of bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells derived from head and neck cancer patients - A FDA-IND enabling study regarding MSC-based treatments for radiation-induced xerostomia.
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Blitzer GC, Paz C, Glassey A, Ganz OR, Giri J, Pennati A, Meyers RO, Bates AM, Nickel KP, Weiss M, Morris ZS, Mattison RJ, McDowell KA, Croxford E, Chappell RJ, Glazer TA, Rogus-Pulia NM, Galipeau J, and Kimple RJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Mice, Bone Marrow, Salivary Glands, Bone Marrow Cells, Xerostomia etiology, Xerostomia therapy, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiation Injuries etiology, Radiation Injuries therapy, Mesenchymal Stem Cells
- Abstract
Purpose: Salivary dysfunction is a significant side effect of radiation therapy for head and neck cancer (HNC). Preliminary data suggests that mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) can improve salivary function. Whether MSCs from HNC patients who have completed chemoradiation are functionally similar to those from healthy patients is unknown. We performed a pilot clinical study to determine whether bone marrow-derived MSCs [MSC(M)] from HNC patients could be used for the treatment of RT-induced salivary dysfunction., Methods: An IRB-approved pilot clinical study was undertaken on HNC patients with xerostomia who had completed treatment two or more years prior. Patients underwent iliac crest bone marrow aspirate and MSC(M) were isolated and cultured. Culture-expanded MSC(M) were stimulated with IFNγ and cryopreserved prior to reanimation and profiling for functional markers by flow cytometry and ELISA. MSC(M) were additionally injected into mice with radiation-induced xerostomia and the changes in salivary gland histology and salivary production were examined., Results: A total of six subjects were enrolled. MSC(M) from all subjects were culture expanded to > 20 million cells in a median of 15.5 days (range 8-20 days). Flow cytometry confirmed that cultured cells from HNC patients were MSC(M). Functional flow cytometry demonstrated that these IFNγ-stimulated MSC(M) acquired an immunosuppressive phenotype. IFNγ-stimulated MSC(M) from HNC patients were found to express GDNF, WNT1, and R-spondin 1 as well as pro-angiogenesis and immunomodulatory cytokines. In mice, IFNγ-stimulated MSC(M) injection after radiation decreased the loss of acinar cells, decreased the formation of fibrosis, and increased salivary production., Conclusions: MSC (M) from previously treated HNC patients can be expanded for auto-transplantation and are functionally active. Furthermore IFNγ-stimulated MSC(M) express proteins implicated in salivary gland regeneration. This study provides preliminary data supporting the feasibility of using autologous MSC(M) from HNC patients to treat RT-induced salivary dysfunction., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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17. Comparative Study of the Effect of Radiation Delivered by Lutetium-177 or Actinium-225 on Anti-GD2 Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cell Viability and Functions.
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Sodji QH, Forsberg MH, Cappabianca D, Kerr CP, Sarko L, Shea A, Adam DP, Eickhoff JC, Ong IM, Hernandez R, Weichert J, Bednarz BP, Saha K, Sondel PM, Capitini CM, and Morris ZS
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have been relatively ineffective against solid tumors. Low-dose radiation which can be delivered to multiple sites of metastases by targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT) can elicit immunostimulatory effects. However, TRT has never been combined with CAR T cells against solid tumors in a clinical setting. This study investigated the effects of radiation delivered by Lutetium-177 (
177 Lu) and Actinium-225 (225 Ac) on the viability and effector function of CAR T cells in vitro to evaluate the feasibility of such therapeutic combinations. After the irradiation of anti-GD2 CAR T cells with various doses of radiation delivered by177 Lu or225 Ac, their viability and cytotoxic activity against GD2-expressing human CHLA-20 neuroblastoma and melanoma M21 cells were determined by flow cytometry. The expression of the exhaustion marker PD-1, activation marker CD69 and the activating receptor NKG2D was measured on the irradiated anti-GD2 CAR T cells. Both177 Lu and225 Ac displayed a dose-dependent toxicity on anti-GD2 CAR T cells. However, radiation enhanced the cytotoxic activity of these CAR T cells against CHLA-20 and M21 irrespective of the dose tested and the type of radionuclide. No significant changes in the expression of PD-1, CD69 and NKG2D was noted on the CAR T cells following irradiation. Given a lower CAR T cell viability at equal doses and an enhancement of cytotoxic activity irrespective of the radionuclide type,177 Lu-based TRT may be preferred over225 Ac-based TRT when evaluating a potential synergism between these therapies in vivo against solid tumors.- Published
- 2023
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18. NK cells propagate T cell immunity following in situ tumor vaccination.
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Jin WJ, Jagodinsky JC, Vera JM, Clark PA, Zuleger CL, Erbe AK, Ong IM, Le T, Tetreault K, Berg T, Rakhmilevich AL, Kim K, Newton MA, Albertini MR, Sondel PM, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Mice, Humans, Animals, Killer Cells, Natural, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Vaccination, Interleukin-2 metabolism, Melanoma metabolism
- Abstract
We report an in situ vaccination, adaptable to nearly any type of cancer, that combines radiotherapy targeting one tumor and intratumoral injection of this site with tumor-specific antibody and interleukin-2 (IL-2; 3xTx). In a phase I clinical trial, administration of 3xTx (with an immunocytokine fusion of tumor-specific antibody and IL-2, hu14.18-IL2) to subjects with metastatic melanoma increases peripheral CD8
+ T cell effector polyfunctionality. This suggests the potential for 3xTx to promote antitumor immunity against metastatic tumors. In poorly immunogenic syngeneic murine melanoma or head and neck carcinoma models, 3xTx stimulates CD8+ T cell-mediated antitumor responses at targeted and non-targeted tumors. During 3xTx treatment, natural killer (NK) cells promote CTLA4+ regulatory T cell (Treg ) apoptosis in non-targeted tumors. This is dependent on NK cell expression of CD86, which is upregulated downstream of KLRK1. NK cell depletion increases Treg infiltration, diminishing CD8+ T cell-dependent antitumor response. These findings demonstrate that NK cells sustain and propagate CD8+ T cell immunity following 3xTx., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests Z.S.M. is a member of the scientific advisory boards for Archeus Technologies, NorthStar Medical Isotopes, and Seneca Therapeutics., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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19. Antibody landscape of C57BL/6 mice cured of B78 melanoma via a combined radiation and immunocytokine immunotherapy regimen.
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Hoefges A, McIlwain SJ, Erbe AK, Mathers N, Xu A, Melby D, Tetreault K, Le T, Kim K, Pinapati RS, Garcia BH, Patel J, Heck M, Feils AS, Tsarovsky N, Hank JA, Morris ZS, Ong IM, and Sondel PM
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Proteome, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Immunotherapy, Peptides, Epitopes, Immune Sera, Melanoma
- Abstract
Sera of immune mice that were previously cured of their melanoma through a combined radiation and immunocytokine immunotherapy regimen consisting of 12 Gy of external beam radiation and the intratumoral administration of an immunocytokine (anti-GD2 mAb coupled to IL-2) with long-term immunological memory showed strong antibody-binding against melanoma tumor cell lines via flow cytometric analysis. Using a high-density whole-proteome peptide array (of 6.090.593 unique peptides), we assessed potential protein-targets for antibodies found in immune sera. Sera from 6 of these cured mice were analyzed with this high-density, whole-proteome peptide array to determine specific antibody-binding sites and their linear peptide sequence. We identified thousands of peptides that were targeted by these 6 mice and exhibited strong antibody binding only by immune (after successful cure and rechallenge), not naïve (before tumor implantation) sera and developed a robust method to detect these differentially targeted peptides. Confirmatory studies were done to validate these results using 2 separate systems, a peptide ELISA and a smaller scale peptide array utilizing a slightly different technology. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study of the full set of germline encoded linear peptide-based proteome epitopes that are recognized by immune sera from mice cured of cancer via radio-immunotherapy. We furthermore found that although the generation of B-cell repertoire in immune development is vastly variable, and numerous epitopes are identified uniquely by immune serum from each of these 6 immune mice evaluated, there are still several epitopes and proteins that are commonly recognized by at least half of the mice studied. This suggests that every mouse has a unique set of antibodies produced in response to the curative therapy, creating an individual "fingerprint." Additionally, certain epitopes and proteins stand out as more immunogenic, as they are recognized by multiple mice in the immune group., Competing Interests: RSP, BG & JP are all employees of Nimble Therapeutics, the producer of the high-density peptide arrays used for this research. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Hoefges, McIlwain, Erbe, Mathers, Xu, Melby, Tetreault, Le, Kim, Pinapati, Garcia, Patel, Heck, Feils, Tsarovsky, Hank, Morris, Ong and Sondel.)
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- 2023
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20. The Cancer Moonshot Immuno-Oncology Translational Network at 5: accelerating cancer immunotherapies.
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Annapragada A, Sikora AG, Marathe H, Liu S, Demetriou M, Fong L, Gao J, Kufe D, Morris ZS, Vilar E, Sharon E, Hutson A, and Odunsi K
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Medical Oncology, Immunotherapy, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
The Immuno-Oncology Translational Network (IOTN) was established in 2018 as part of the Cancer Moonshot. In 2022, President Joe Biden set new goals to reduce the cancer death rate by half within 25 years and improve the lives of people with cancer and cancer survivors. The IOTN is focused on accelerating translation of cancer immunology research, from bench to bedside, and improving immunotherapy outcomes across a wide array of cancers in the adult population. The unique structure and team science approach of the IOTN is designed to accelerate discovery and evaluation of novel immune-based therapeutic and prevention strategies. In this article, we describe IOTN progress to date, including new initiatives and the development of a robust set of resources to advance cancer immunology research. We summarize new insights by IOTN researchers, some of which are ripe for translation for several types of cancers. Looking to the future, we identify barriers to the translation of immuno-oncology concepts into clinical trials and key areas for action and improvements that are suitable for high-yield investments. Based on these experiences, we recommend novel National Institutes of Health funding mechanisms and development of new resources to address these barriers., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2023
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21. Toxicity and Patient-Reported Quality-of-Life Outcomes After Prostate Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy With Focal Boost to Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Identified Prostate Cancer Lesions: Results of a Phase 2 Trial.
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Morris BA, Holmes EE, Anger NJ, Cooley G, Schuster JM, Hurst N, Baschnagel AM, Bassetti MF, Blitzer GC, Chappell RJ, Bayliss RA, Morris ZS, Ritter MA, and Floberg JM
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Prostate diagnostic imaging, Prostate pathology, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Radiosurgery adverse effects, Radiosurgery methods, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms radiotherapy, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Gastrointestinal Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Purpose: In this prospective phase 2 trial, we investigated the toxicity and patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes in patients treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) to the prostate gland and a simultaneous focal boost to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-identified intraprostatic lesions while also de-escalating dose to the adjacent organs at risk., Methods and Materials: Eligible patients included low- or intermediate-risk prostate cancer (Gleason score ≤7, prostate specific antigen ≤20, T stage ≤2b). SBRT was prescribed to 40 Gy in 5 fractions delivered every other day to the prostate, with any areas of high disease burden (MRI-identified prostate imaging reporting and data system 4 or 5 lesions) simultaneously escalated to 42.5 to 45 Gy and areas overlapping organs at risk (within 2 mm of urethra, rectum, and bladder) constrained to 36.25 Gy (n = 100). Patients without a pretreatment MRI or without MRI-identified lesions were treated to dose of 37.5 Gy with no focal boost (n = 14)., Results: From 2015 to 2022, a total of 114 patients were enrolled with a median follow-up of 42 months. No acute or late grade 3+ gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity was observed. One patient developed late grade 3 genitourinary (GU) toxicity at 16 months. In patients treated with focal boost (n = 100), acute grade 2 GU and GI toxicity was seen in 38% and 4% of patients, respectively. Cumulative late grade 2+ GU and GI toxicities at 24 months were 13% and 5% respectively. Patient-reported outcomes showed no significant long-term change from baseline in urinary, bowel, hormonal, or sexual quality-of-life scores after treatment., Conclusions: SBRT to a dose of 40 Gy to the prostate gland with a simultaneous focal boost up to 45 Gy is well tolerated with similar rates of acute and late grade 2+ GI and GU toxicity as seen in other SBRT regimens without intraprostatic boost. Moreover, no significant long-term changes were seen in patient-reported urinary, bowel, or sexual outcomes from pretreatment baseline., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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22. Radiation-associated secondary malignancies: a novel opportunity for applying immunotherapies.
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Atajanova T, Rahman MM, Konieczkowski DJ, and Morris ZS
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- Humans, T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Cytokines, Tumor Microenvironment, B7-H1 Antigen metabolism, Immunotherapy methods, Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Radiation is commonly used as a treatment intended to cure or palliate cancer patients. Despite remarkable advances in the precision of radiotherapy delivery, even the most advanced forms inevitably expose some healthy tissues surrounding the target site to radiation. On rare occasions, this results in the development of radiation-associated secondary malignancies (RASM). RASM are typically high-grade and carry a poorer prognosis than their non-radiated counterparts. RASM are characterized by a high mutation burden, increased T cell infiltration, and a microenvironment that bears unique inflammatory signatures of prior radiation, including increased expression of various cytokines (e.g., TGF-β, TNF-α, IL4, and IL10). Interestingly, these cytokines have been shown to up-regulate the expression of PD-1 and/or PD-L1-an immune checkpoint receptor/ligand pair that is commonly targeted by immune checkpoint blocking immunotherapies. Here, we review the current understanding of the tumor-immune interactions in RASM, highlight the distinct clinical and molecular characteristics of RASM that may render them immunologically "hot," and propose a rationale for the formal testing of immune checkpoint blockade as a treatment approach for patients with RASM., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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23. Cyclophosphamide augments the efficacy of in situ vaccination in a mouse melanoma model.
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Tsarovsky N, Felder M, Heck M, Slowinski J, Rasmussen K, VandenHeuvel S, Zaborek J, Morris ZS, Erbe AK, Sondel PM, and Rakhmilevich AL
- Abstract
Introduction: We have previously shown that an intratumoral (IT) injection of the hu14.18-IL2 immunocytokine (IC), an anti-GD2 antibody linked to interleukin 2, can serve as an in situ vaccine and synergize with local radiotherapy (RT) to induce T cell-mediated antitumor effects. We hypothesized that cyclophosphamide (CY), a chemotherapeutic agent capable of depleting T regulatory cells (Tregs), would augment in situ vaccination. GD2
+ B78 mouse melanoma cells were injected intradermally in syngeneic C57BL/6 mice., Methods: Treatments with RT (12Gy) and/or CY (100 mg/kg i.p.) started when tumors reached 100-300 mm3 (day 0 of treatment), followed by five daily injections of IT-IC (25 mcg) on days 5-9. Tumor growth and survival were followed. In addition, tumors were analyzed by flow cytometry., Results: Similar to RT, CY enhanced the antitumor effect of IC. The strongest antitumor effect was achieved when CY, RT and IC were combined, as compared to combinations of IC+RT or IC+CY. Flow cytometric analyses showed that the combined treatment with CY, RT and IC decreased Tregs and increased the ratio of CD8+ cells/Tregs within the tumors. Moreover, in mice bearing two separate tumors, the combination of RT and IT-IC delivered to one tumor, together with systemic CY, led to a systemic antitumor effect detected as shrinkage of the tumor not treated directly with RT and IT-IC. Cured mice developed immunological memory as they were able to reject B78 tumor rechallenge., Conclusion: Taken together, these preclinical results show that CY can augment the antitumor efficacy of IT- IC, given alone or in combination with local RT, suggesting potential benefit in clinical testing of these combinations., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Tsarovsky, Felder, Heck, Slowinski, Rasmussen, VandenHeuvel, Zaborek, Morris, Erbe, Sondel and Rakhmilevich.)- Published
- 2023
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24. ATM inhibition augments type I interferon response and antitumor T-cell immunity when combined with radiation therapy in murine tumor models.
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Jin WJ, Zangl LM, Hyun M, Massoud E, Schroeder K, Alexandridis RA, and Morris ZS
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- Animals, Mice, Combined Modality Therapy, Administration, Oral, Cell Membrane, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Melanoma
- Abstract
Background: Radiation therapy (RT) elicits DNA double-strand breaks, resulting in tumor cytotoxicity and a type I interferon (IFN) response via stimulator of interferon genes (STING) activation. We investigated whether combining RT with an ataxia-telangiectasia mutated inhibitor promoted these effects and amplified tumor immunity., Methods: Mice-bearing syngeneic flank tumors (MOC2 head and neck squamous cell carcinoma or B78 melanoma) were treated with tumor-directed RT and oral administration of AZD0156. Specific immune cell depletion, type 1 interferon receptor 1 knock-out mice (IFNAR1-KO), and STING-deficient tumor cells were used to investigate tumor-immune crosstalk following RT and AZD0156 treatment., Results: Combining RT and AZD0156 reduced tumor growth compared with RT or AZD0156 alone in mice bearing MOC2 or B78 tumors. Low-dose AZD0156 (1-100 nM) alone did not affect tumor cell proliferation but suppressed tumor cell clonogenicity in combination with RT. Low-dose AZD0156 with RT synergistically increased IFN-β, major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-I, and programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression in tumor cells. In contrast to wild-type mice, IFNAR1-KO mice showed reduced CD8+T cell tumor infiltration and poor survival following RT+AZD0156 treatment. CD8+T cell depletion reduced antitumor response during RT+AZD0156 treatment. STING-deficient MOC2 (MOC2-STING+/-) or B78 (B78-STING-/-) tumors eliminated the effects of RT+AZD0156 on the expression of IFN-β, MHC-I, and PD-L1, and reduced CD8+T cell infiltration and migration. Additional anti-PD-L1 therapy promoted antitumor response by elevation of tumor-MHC-I and lymphocyte activation., Conclusions: Combined radiation and AZD0156 increase STING-dependent antitumor response. Tumor-derived cell-autonomous IFN-β amplification drives both MHC-I and PD-L1 induction at the tumor cell surface, which is required by anti-PD-L1 therapy to promote antitumor immune response following RT and AZD0156 combination therapy., Competing Interests: Competing interests: ZSM is a member of the Scientific Advisory Boards for Archeus Technologies, Seneca Therapeutics, and NorthStar Medical Isotopes., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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25. Advancing Towards Personalized Prescription of Radiotherapy Dose.
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Citrin D and Morris ZS
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- Humans, Radiotherapy Dosage, Prescriptions, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated
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- 2023
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26. Factors impacting the efficacy of the in-situ vaccine with CpG and OX40 agonist.
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Pieper AA, Spiegelman DV, Felder MAR, Feils AS, Tsarovsky NW, Zaborek J, Morris ZS, Erbe AK, Rakhmilevich AL, and Sondel PM
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- Mice, Animals, T-Lymphocytes, Macrophages, Receptors, OX40, Immunotherapy methods, Melanoma genetics, Lymphoma, Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: The in-situ vaccine using CpG oligodeoxynucleotide combined with OX40 agonist antibody (CpG + OX40) has been shown to be an effective therapy activating an anti-tumor T cell response in certain settings. The roles of tumor volume, tumor model, and the addition of checkpoint blockade in the efficacy of CpG + OX40 in-situ vaccination remains unknown., Methods: Mice bearing flank tumors (B78 melanoma or A20 lymphoma) were treated with combinations of CpG, OX40, and anti-CTLA-4. Tumor growth and survival were monitored. In vivo T cell depletion, tumor cell phenotype, and tumor infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) studies were performed. Tumor cell sensitivity to CpG and macrophages were evaluated in vitro., Results: As tumor volumes increased in the B78 (one-tumor) and A20 (one-tumor or two-tumor) models, the anti-tumor efficacy of the in-situ vaccine decreased. In vitro, CpG had a direct effect on A20 proliferation and phenotype and an indirect effect on B78 proliferation via macrophage activation. As A20 tumors progressed in vivo, tumor cell phenotype changed, and T cells became more involved in the local CpG + OX40 mediated anti-tumor response. In mice with larger tumors that were poorly responsive to CpG + OX40, the addition of anti-CTLA-4 enhanced the anti-tumor efficacy in the A20 but not B78 models., Conclusions: Increased tumor volume negatively impacts the anti-tumor capability of CpG + OX40 in-situ vaccine. The addition of checkpoint blockade augmented the efficacy of CpG + OX40 in the A20 but not B78 model. These results highlight the importance of considering multiple preclinical model conditions when assessing the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy regimens and their translation to clinical testing., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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27. Updates on radiotherapy-immunotherapy combinations: Proceedings of 6 th annual ImmunoRad conference.
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Gregucci F, Spada S, Barcellos-Hoff MH, Bhardwaj N, Chan Wah Hak C, Fiorentino A, Guha C, Guzman ML, Harrington K, Herrera FG, Honeychurch J, Hong T, Iturri L, Jaffee E, Karam SD, Knott SRV, Koumenis C, Lyden D, Marciscano AE, Melcher A, Mondini M, Mondino A, Morris ZS, Pitroda S, Quezada SA, Santambrogio L, Shiao S, Stagg J, Telarovic I, Timmerman R, Vozenin MC, Weichselbaum R, Welsh J, Wilkins A, Xu C, Zappasodi R, Zou W, Bobard A, Demaria S, Galluzzi L, Deutsch E, and Formenti SC
- Subjects
- Humans, Combined Modality Therapy, Immunotherapy, Neoplasms radiotherapy, Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Focal radiation therapy (RT) has attracted considerable attention as a combinatorial partner for immunotherapy (IT), largely reflecting a well-defined, predictable safety profile and at least some potential for immunostimulation. However, only a few RT-IT combinations have been tested successfully in patients with cancer, highlighting the urgent need for an improved understanding of the interaction between RT and IT in both preclinical and clinical scenarios. Every year since 2016, ImmunoRad gathers experts working at the interface between RT and IT to provide a forum for education and discussion, with the ultimate goal of fostering progress in the field at both preclinical and clinical levels. Here, we summarize the key concepts and findings presented at the Sixth Annual ImmunoRad conference., Competing Interests: MHBH is or has have been a recipient of research grants paid to UCSF or in-kind resources from Roche-Genentech, Varian Medical Systems, Eli Lilly, Pathway Innovations and has received fees for consulting from EMD-Serono, Varian Medical Systems, Genentech, Pathway Innovation, Scholar Rock. KHhas Honoraria: Arch Oncology (Inst), AstraZeneca (Inst), BMS (Inst), Boehringer Ingelheim (Inst), Codiak Biosciences (Inst), F-Star Therapeutics (Inst), Inzen Therapeutics (Inst), Merck Serono (Inst), MSD (Inst), Oncolys Biopharma (Inst), Pfizer (Inst), Replimune (Inst), VacV Biotherapeutics (Inst); Consulting or Advisory Role: Arch Oncology (Inst), AstraZeneca (Inst), BMS (Inst), Boehringer Ingelheim (Inst), Inzen Therapeutics (Inst), Merck Serono (Inst), MSD (Inst), Oncolys BioPharma (Inst), Replimune (Inst); Speakers’ Bureau: BMS (Inst), Merck Serono (Inst), MSD (Inst); Research Funding: AstraZeneca (Inst), Boehringer Ingelheim (Inst), Merck Sharp & Dohme (Inst), Replimune (Inst). FGH received Grant or Research Support Companies from Accuray inc, Bioprotect, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Roche-ImFlame/ImCore, Nanobiotix, AstraZeneca, Debio Pharmaceuticals, Seagen, Eisai, MSD; Grant or Research Support Foundations from Prostate Cancer Foundation, San Salvatore Foundation; Investigator or Co-Investigator Clinical Trials in Bristol-Myers Squibb; Consultations: Johnson & Johnson; Academic Collaborations: EORTC chairman Gynecology Cancer Group, ESMO Scientific Committee member for drug development, ASTRO Scientific Committee Annual Meeting. TH has Consulting: Synthetic Biologics, Novocure, Boston Scientific, Inivata, Merck, GSK; Scientific Advisory Board: PanTher Therapeutics (Equity), Lustgarten; Research Funding (Clinical Trials): Taiho, AstraZeneca, BMS, GSK, IntraOp, Ipsen. EJ reports other support from Abmeta and Adventris, personal fees from Achilles, Dragonfly, Mestag, The Medical Home Group, and Surgtx, other support from Parker Institute, grants and other support from the Lustgarten Foundation, Genentech, BMS, and Break Through Cancer outside the submitted work. SDK receives clinical funding from AstraZeneca, Genentech, and Ionis; she also receives preclinical research funding from Roche. KS is founder and consultant for Faeth Therapeutics and Transomic Technologies. CK is the co-recipient of a Sponsored Research Agreement from Ion Beam Applications (IBA). AM is funded by the Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC IG 2018 Id.21763 and AIRC Programma di ricerca 5 per Mille 2019 Id.22737). MM declare grants from Boehringer Ingelheim, AC Biosciences and MSD outside the submitted work. ZSM has Scientific Advisory Board roles and equity options with Archeus Technologies and Seneca Therapeutics. JS owns stock and is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of Surface Oncology, and is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of Domain Therapeutics. RT has research grants to his institution from: Varian Medical Systems, Elekta Oncology, Accuray, Inc; scientific advisory board member for: Reflexion Medical, ImmuneSensor Therapeutics. AW acknowledge funding from AstraZeneca and imCORE. RW has stock and other ownership interests with Boost Therapeutics, Immvira LLC, Reflexion Pharmaceuticals, Coordination Pharmaceuticals Inc., Magi Therapeutics, Oncosenescence, Aqualung Therapeutics Corporation, and Cyntegron; he has served in a consulting or advisory role for Aettis Inc., AstraZeneca, Coordination Pharmaceuticals, Genus, Merck Serono S.A., Nano Proteagen, NKGen Biotech, Shuttle Pharmaceuticals, Highlight Therapeutics, S.L., Aqualung Therapeutics Corporation; he has research grants with Varian and Regeneron. RZ is scientific advisory board member of iTeos Therapeutics, receives research grant support from Bristol Myers Squibb and AstraZeneca, and is inventor on patent applications related to work on GITR, CTLA-4, and PD-1 (patent numbers: US20180244793A1; US10323091B2; WO2018106864A1; WO2019094352A1). SD has received compensation for consultant/advisory services from Lytix Biopharma, Mersana Therapeutics, EMD Serono, Ono Pharmaceutical, and Genentech, and research support from Lytix Biopharma and Boehringer-Ingelheim for unrelated projects. LG is/has been holding research contracts with Lytix Biopharma, Promontory and Onxeo, has received consulting/advisory honoraria from Boehringer Ingelheim, AstraZeneca, OmniSEQ, Onxeo, The Longevity Labs, Inzen, Imvax, Sotio, Promontory, Noxopharm, EduCom, and the Luke Heller TECPR2 Foundation, and holds Promontory stock options. ED reports grants and personal fees from Roche Genentech; grants from Servier; grants from AstraZeneca; grants and personal fees from Merck-Serono; grants from BMS; and grants from MSD outside the submitted work. SCF has Consultant: Bayer, Bristol Myers Squibb, Varian, ViewRay, Accuray, Elekta, Janssen, Regeneron, GlaxoSmithKline, Eisai, Astra Zeneca, MedImmune, Merck US, EMD Serono/Merck, Genentech/ROCHE, Boehringer Ingelheim, Nanobiotix and Grant/Research: support from: Bristol Myers Squibb, Varian, Regeneron, Merck, Celldex. All other authors have no conflict of interest to declare., (© 2023 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.)
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- 2023
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28. Estrogen receptor blockade and radiation therapy cooperate to enhance the response of immunologically cold ER+ breast cancer to immunotherapy.
- Author
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O'Leary KA, Bates AM, Jin WJ, Burkel BM, Sriramaneni RN, Emma SE, Nystuen EJ, Sumiec EG, Ponik SM, Morris ZS, and Schuler LA
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Fulvestrant pharmacology, Immunotherapy, Estrogens, Estrogen Antagonists, Immunosuppressive Agents, Receptors, Estrogen, Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: Most patients with estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancer do not respond to immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI); the tumor microenvironment (TME) of these cancers is generally immunosuppressive and contains few tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. Radiation therapy (RT) can increase tumor inflammation and infiltration by lymphocytes but does not improve responses to ICIs in these patients. This may result, in part, from additional effects of RT that suppress anti-tumor immunity, including increased tumor infiltration by myeloid-derived suppressor cells and regulatory T cells. We hypothesized that anti-estrogens, which are a standard of care for ER+ breast cancer, may ameliorate these detrimental effects of RT by reducing the recruitment/ activation of suppressive immune populations in the radiated TME, increasing anti-tumor immunity and responsiveness to ICIs., Methods: To interrogate the effect of the selective estrogen receptor downregulator, fulvestrant, on the irradiated TME in the absence of confounding growth inhibition by fulvestrant on tumor cells, we used the TC11 murine model of anti-estrogen resistant ER+ breast cancer. Tumors were orthotopically transplanted into immunocompetent syngeneic mice. Once tumors were established, we initiated treatment with fulvestrant or vehicle, followed by external beam RT one week later. We examined the number and activity of tumor infiltrating immune cells using flow cytometry, microscopy, transcript levels, and cytokine profiles. We tested whether fulvestrant improved tumor response and animal survival when added to the combination of RT and ICI., Results: Despite resistance of TC11 tumors to anti-estrogen therapy alone, fulvestrant slowed tumor regrowth following RT, and significantly altered multiple immune populations in the irradiated TME. Fulvestrant reduced the influx of Ly6C+Ly6G+ cells, increased markers of pro-inflammatory myeloid cells and activated T cells, and augmented the ratio of CD8+: FOXP3+ T cells. In contrast to the minimal effects of ICIs when co-treated with either fulvestrant or RT alone, combinatorial treatment with fulvestrant, RT and ICIs significantly reduced tumor growth and prolonged survival., Conclusions: A combination of RT and fulvestrant can overcome the immunosuppressive TME in a preclinical model of ER+ breast cancer, enhancing the anti-tumor response and increasing the response to ICIs, even when growth of tumor cells is no longer estrogen sensitive., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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29. In Situ Vaccination Following Intratumoral Injection of IL2 and Poly-l-lysine/Iron Oxide/CpG Nanoparticles to a Radiated Tumor Site.
- Author
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Zhang Y, Rahman MM, Clark PA, Sriramaneni RN, Havighurst T, Kerr CP, Zhu M, Jones J, Wang X, Kim K, Gong S, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Mice, Interleukin-2, Polylysine, Injections, Intralesional, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Antibodies, Vaccination, Cell Line, Tumor, Tumor Microenvironment, Neoplasms drug therapy, Nanoparticles
- Abstract
The in situ vaccine effect of radiation therapy (RT) has been shown to be limited in both preclinical and clinical settings, possibly due to the inadequacy of RT alone to stimulate in situ vaccination in immunologically "cold" tumor microenvironments (TMEs) and the mixed effects of RT in promoting tumor infiltration of both effector and suppressor immune cells. To address these limitations, we combined intratumoral injection of the radiated site with IL2 and a multifunctional nanoparticle (PIC). The local injection of these agents produced a cooperative effect that favorably immunomodulated the irradiated TME, enhancing the activation of tumor-infiltrating T cells and improving systemic anti-tumor T cell immunity. In syngeneic murine tumor models, the PIC+IL2+RT combination significantly improved the tumor response, surpassing the single or dual combinations of these treatments. Furthermore, this treatment led to the activation of tumor-specific immune memory and improved abscopal effects. Our findings suggest that this strategy can be used to augment the in situ vaccine effect of RT in clinical settings.
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- 2023
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30. Antibody landscape of C57BL/6 mice cured of B78 melanoma via immunotherapy.
- Author
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Hoefges A, McIlwain SJ, Erbe AK, Mathers N, Xu A, Melby D, Tetreault K, Le T, Kim K, Pinapati RS, Garcia B, Patel J, Heck M, Feils AS, Tsarovsky N, Hank JA, Morris ZS, Ong IM, and Sondel PM
- Abstract
Hoefges et al. utilized a whole-proteome peptide array approach to show that C57BL/6 mice develop a large repertoire of antibodies against linear peptide sequences of their melanoma after receiving a curative immunotherapy regimen consisting of radiation and an immunocytokine. Antibodies can play an important role in innate and adaptive immune responses against cancer, and in preventing infectious disease. Flow cytometry analysis of sera of immune mice that were previously cured of their melanoma through a combined immunotherapy regimen with long-term memory showed strong antibody-binding against melanoma tumor cell lines. Using a high-density whole-proteome peptide array, we assessed potential protein-targets for antibodies found in immune sera. Sera from 6 of these cured mice were analyzed with this high-density, whole-proteome peptide array to determine specific antibody-binding sites and their linear peptide sequence. We identified thousands of peptides that were targeted by 2 or more of these 6 mice and exhibited strong antibody binding only by immune, not naive sera. Confirmatory studies were done to validate these results using 2 separate ELISA-based systems. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study of the "immunome" of protein-based epitopes that are recognized by immune sera from mice cured of cancer via immunotherapy., Competing Interests: 9Conflict of Interest RSP, BG & JP are all employees of Nimble Therapeutics, the producer of the high-density peptide arrays used for this research. Other than these affiliations, the authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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31. Using 18 F-DCFPyL Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen-Directed Positron Emission Tomography/Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Define Intraprostatic Boosts for Prostate Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy.
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Floberg JM, Wells SA, Ojala D, Bayliss RA, Hill PM, Morris BA, Morris ZS, Ritter M, and Cho SY
- Abstract
Purpose: The recently reported FLAME trial demonstrated a biochemical disease-free survival benefit to using a focal intraprostatic boost to multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI)-identified lesions in men with localized prostate cancer treated with definitive radiation therapy. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-directed positron emission tomography (PET) may identify additional areas of disease. In this work, we investigated using both PSMA PET and mpMRI in planning focal intraprostatic boosts using stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT)., Methods and Materials: We evaluated a cohort of patients (n = 13) with localized prostate cancer who were imaged with 2-(3-(1-carboxy-5-[(6-[18F]fluoro-pyridine-2-carbonyl)-amino]-pentyl)-ureido)-pentanedioic acid (
18 F-DCFPyL) PET/MRI on a prospective imaging trial before undergoing definitive therapy. The number of lesions concordant (overlapping) and discordant (no overlap) on PET and MRI was assessed. Overlap between concordant lesions was evaluated using the Dice and Jaccard similarity coefficients. Prostate SBRT plans were created fusing the PET/MRI imaging to computed tomography scans acquired the same day. Plans were created using only MRI-identified lesions, only PET-identified lesions, and the combined PET/MRI lesions. Coverage of the intraprostatic lesions and doses to the rectum and urethra were assessed for each of these plans., Results: The majority of lesions (21/39, 53.8%) were discordant between MRI and PET, with more lesions seen by PET alone (12) than MRI alone (9). Of lesions that were concordant between PET and MRI, there were still areas that did not overlap between scans (average Dice coefficient, 0.34). Prostate SBRT planning using all lesions to define a focal intraprostatic boost provided the best coverage of all lesions without compromising constraints on the rectum and urethra., Conclusions: Using both mpMRI and PSMA-directed PET may better identify all areas of gross disease within the prostate. Using both imaging modalities could improve the planning of focal intraprostatic boosts., Competing Interests: Dr Morris reports the following conflicts of interest: Archeus Technologies, scientific advisory board; Seneca Therapeutics, scientific advisory board. Dr Wells reports the following conflicts of interest: Ethicon, consultant. Dr Cho reports the following conflicts of interest: Progenics Pharmaceuticals, consultant. No other disclosures were reported., (© 2023 The Authors.)- Published
- 2023
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32. Radiation to all macroscopic sites of tumor permits greater systemic antitumor response to in situ vaccination.
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Carlson PM, Patel RB, Birstler J, Rodriquez M, Sun C, Erbe AK, Bates AM, Marsh I, Grudzinski J, Hernandez R, Pieper AA, Feils AS, Rakhmilevich AL, Weichert JP, Bednarz BP, Sondel PM, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Mice, Animals, Immunotherapy methods, Immunologic Memory, Vaccination, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Melanoma
- Abstract
Background: The antitumor effects of external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) are mediated, in part, by an immune response. We have reported that a single fraction of 12 Gy EBRT combined with intratumoral anti-GD2 hu14.18-IL2 immunocytokine (IC) generates an effective in situ vaccine (ISV) against GD2-positive murine tumors. This ISV is effective in eradicating single tumors with sustained immune memory; however, it does not generate an adequate abscopal response against macroscopic distant tumors. Given the immune-stimulatory capacity of radiation therapy (RT), we hypothesized that delivering RT to all sites of disease would augment systemic antitumor responses to ISV., Methods: We used a syngeneic B78 murine melanoma model consisting of a 'primary' flank tumor and a contralateral smaller 'secondary' flank tumor, treated with 12 Gy EBRT and intratumoral IC immunotherapy to the primary and additional EBRT to the secondary tumor. As a means of delivering RT to all sites of disease, both known and occult, we also used a novel alkylphosphocholine analog, NM600, conjugated to
90 Y as a targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT). Tumor growth, overall survival, and cause of death were measured. Flow cytometry was used to evaluate immune population changes in both tumors., Results: Abscopal effects of local ISV were amplified by delivering as little as 2-6 Gy of EBRT to the secondary tumor. When the primary tumor ISV regimen was delivered in mice receiving 12 Gy EBRT to the secondary tumor, we observed improved overall survival and more disease-free mice with immune memory compared with either ISV or 12 Gy EBRT alone. Similarly, TRT combined with ISV resulted in improved overall survival and a trend towards reduced tumor growth rates when compared with either treatment alone. Using flow cytometry, we identified an influx of CD8+ T cells with a less exhausted phenotype in both the ISV-targeted primary and the distant secondary tumor following the combination of secondary tumor EBRT or TRT with primary tumor ISV., Conclusions: We report a novel use for low-dose RT, not as a direct antitumor modality but as an immunomodulator capable of driving and expanding antitumor immunity against metastatic tumor sites following ISV., Competing Interests: Competing interests: ZSM, JPW, RH, and JG have financial interests in Archeus Technologies. ZSM is a member of the Scientific Advisory Boards for Archeus Technologies and for Seneca Therapeutics. PMS is an unpaid medical advisor for Invenra. JPW is a cofounder, CSO, and director of Archeus Technologies, which holds the licence rights to NM600-related technologies. BPB and JG are cofounders of Voximetry, and BPB is the CSO. The following patents have been applied for or filed by the University of Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation: US Patent 10,736,949, 'Radiohalogenated agents for in situ immune modulated cancer vaccination', with ZSM, PMS, JPW, and BPB as inventors; US Patent 10,751,430, 'Targeted radiotherapy chelates for in situ immune modulated cancer vaccination' with ZSM, PMS, JPW, BPB, and PMC as inventors; application no. 15/809,427, 'Using targeted radiotherapy to drive anti-tumor immune response to immunotherapies', ZSM, PMS, JPW, PMC, JG, RBP, and RH as inventors; and US 2011/0060602, 'A1 treatment planning system for radiopharmaceuticals', with BPB and JG as inventors., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2023
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33. Developments in Combining Targeted Radionuclide Therapies and Immunotherapies for Cancer Treatment.
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Kerr CP, Grudzinski JJ, Nguyen TP, Hernandez R, Weichert JP, and Morris ZS
- Abstract
Targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT) and immunotherapy are rapidly growing classes of cancer treatments. Basic, translational, and clinical research are now investigating therapeutic combinations of these agents. In comparison to external beam radiation therapy (EBRT), TRT has the unique advantage of treating all disease sites following intravenous injection and selective tumor uptake and retention-a particularly beneficial property in metastatic disease settings. The therapeutic value of combining radiation therapy with immune checkpoint blockade to treat metastases has been demonstrated in preclinical studies, whereas results of clinical studies have been mixed. Several clinical trials combining TRT and immune checkpoint blockade have been initiated based on preclinical studies combining these with EBRT and/or TRT. Despite the interest in translation of TRT and immunotherapy combinations, many questions remain surrounding the mechanisms of interaction and the optimal approach to clinical implementation of these combinations. This review highlights the mechanisms of interaction between anti-tumor immunity and radiation therapy and the status of basic and translational research and clinical trials investigating combinations of TRT and immunotherapies.
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- 2022
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34. Developmental origins of the crocodylian skull table and platyrostral face.
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Morris ZS, Vliet KA, Abzhanov A, and Pierce SE
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- Animals, Biological Evolution, Head, Phylogeny, Skull anatomy & histology, Alligators and Crocodiles
- Abstract
The dorsoventrally flattened skull typifies extant Crocodylia perhaps more than any other anatomical feature and is generally considered an adaptation for semi-aquatic feeding. Although the evolutionary origins of caniofacial flattening have been extensively studied, the developmental origins have yet to be explored. To understand how the skull table and platyrostral snout develop, we quantified embryonic development and post-hatching growth (ontogeny) of the crocodylian skull in lateral view using geometric morphometrics. Our dataset (n = 103) includes all but one extant genus and all of the major ecomorphs, including the extremely slender-snouted Gavialis and Tomistoma. Our analysis reveals that the embryonic development of the flattened skull is remarkably similar across ecomorphs, including the presence of a conserved initial embryonic skull shape, similar to prior analysis of dorsal snout shape. Although differences during posthatching ontogeny are recovered among ecomorphs, embryonic patterns are not distinct, revealing an important shift in developmental rate near hatching. In particular, the flattened skull table is achieved by the end of embryonic development with no changes after hatching. Further, the rotation of skull roof and facial bones during development is critical for the stereotypical flatness of the crocodylian skull. Our results suggest selection on hatchling performance and constraints on embryonic skull shape may have been important in this pattern of developmental conservation. The appearance of aspects of cranial flatness among Jurassic stem crocodylians suggests key aspects of these cranial developmental patterns may have been conserved for over 200 million years., (© 2021 American Association for Anatomy.)
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- 2022
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35. Local TLR4 stimulation augments in situ vaccination induced via local radiation and anti-CTLA-4 checkpoint blockade through induction of CD8 T-cell independent Th1 polarization.
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Jagodinsky JC, Bates AM, Clark PA, Sriramaneni RN, Havighurst TC, Chakravarty I, Nystuen EJ, Kim K, Sondel PM, Jin WJ, and Morris ZS
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- Animals, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Cytokines, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors pharmacology, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors therapeutic use, Male, Mice, Receptors, IgG, Vaccination, Cancer Vaccines pharmacology, Toll-Like Receptor 4
- Abstract
Background: Radiation therapy (RT) has been demonstrated to generate an in situ vaccination (ISV) effect in murine models and in patients with cancer; however, this has not routinely translated into enhanced clinical response to immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI). We investigated whether the commonly used vaccine adjuvant, monophosphoryl lipid A (MPL) could augment the ISV regimen consisting of combination RT and ICI., Materials/methods: We used syngeneic murine models of melanoma (B78) and prostate cancer (Myc-CaP). Tumor-bearing mice received either RT (12 Gy, day 1), RT+anti-CTLA-4 (C4, day 3, 6, 9), MPL (20 µg IT injection days 5, 7, 9), RT+C4+MPL, or PBS control. To evaluate the effect of MPL on the irradiated tumor microenvironment, primary tumor with tumor draining lymph nodes were harvested for immune cell infiltration analysis and cytokine profiling, and serum was collected for analysis of antitumor antibody populations., Results: Combination RT+C4+MPL significantly reduced tumor growth, increased survival and complete response rate compared with RT+C4 in both B78 and Myc-CaP models. MPL favorably reprogrammed the irradiated tumor-immune microenvironment toward M1 macrophage and Th1 TBET
+ CD4+ T cell polarization. Furthermore, MPL significantly increased intratumoral expression of several Th1-associated and M1-associated proinflammatory cytokines. In co-culture models, MPL-stimulated macrophages directly activated CD8 T cells and polarized CD4 cells toward Th1 phenotype. MPL treatment significantly increased production of Th1-associated, IgG2c antitumor antibodies, which were required for and predictive of antitumor response to RT+C4+MPL, and enabled macrophage-mediated antibody-dependent direct tumor cell killing by MPL-stimulated macrophages. Macrophage-mediated tumor cell killing was dependent on FcγR expression. In metastatic models, RT and MPL generated a systemic antitumor immune response that augmented response to ICIs. This was dependent on macrophages and CD4+ but not CD8+T cells., Conclusions: We report the potential for MPL to augment the ISV effect of combination RT+C4 through FcγR, macrophage, and TBET+ CD4+ Th1 cell dependent mechanisms. To our knowledge, this is the first report describing generation of a CD8+ T cell-independent, Th1 polarized, systemic antitumor immune response with subsequent generation of immunologic memory. These findings support the potential for vaccine adjuvants to enhance the efficacy of in situ tumor vaccine approaches., Competing Interests: Competing interests: ZSM has financial interest in Archeus Technologies. ZSM is a member of the Scientific Advisory Boards for Archeus Technologies and for Seneca Therapeutics. Based on the results presented herein, ZSM and JCJ are inventors on a filed patent that is managed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation relating to the use of MPL as an adjuvant for in situ vaccines. ZSM and PMS are inventors on patents or filed patents managed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation relating to mAb-related or nanoparticle immunotherapies and the interaction of targeted radionuclide therapies and immunotherapies., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2022
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36. Multifunctional nanoparticle potentiates the in situ vaccination effect of radiation therapy and enhances response to immune checkpoint blockade.
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Zhang Y, Sriramaneni RN, Clark PA, Jagodinsky JC, Ye M, Jin W, Wang Y, Bates A, Kerr CP, Le T, Allawi R, Wang X, Xie R, Havighurst TC, Chakravarty I, Rakhmilevich AL, O'Leary KA, Schuler LA, Sondel PM, Kim K, Gong S, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, Neoplasm, Cell Line, Tumor, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors pharmacology, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors therapeutic use, Immunotherapy methods, Mice, Tumor Microenvironment, Vaccination, Multifunctional Nanoparticles, Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Radiation therapy (RT) activates an in situ vaccine effect when combined with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB), yet this effect may be limited because RT does not fully optimize tumor antigen presentation or fully overcome suppressive mechanisms in the tumor-immune microenvironment. To overcome this, we develop a multifunctional nanoparticle composed of polylysine, iron oxide, and CpG (PIC) to increase tumor antigen presentation, increase the ratio of M1:M2 tumor-associated macrophages, and enhance stimulation of a type I interferon response in conjunction with RT. In syngeneic immunologically "cold" murine tumor models, the combination of RT, PIC, and ICB significantly improves tumor response and overall survival resulting in cure of many mice and consistent activation of tumor-specific immune memory. Combining RT with PIC to elicit a robust in situ vaccine effect presents a simple and readily translatable strategy to potentiate adaptive anti-tumor immunity and augment response to ICB or potentially other immunotherapies., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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37. Mechanism of effective combination radio-immunotherapy against 9464D-GD2, an immunologically cold murine neuroblastoma.
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Aiken TJ, Erbe AK, Zebertavage L, Komjathy D, Feils AS, Rodriguez M, Stuckwisch A, Gillies SD, Morris ZS, Birstler J, Rakhmilevich AL, and Sondel PM
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- Animals, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I, Humans, Immunotherapy, Interferon-gamma, Killer Cells, Natural, Mice, Radioimmunotherapy, Neuroblastoma radiotherapy
- Abstract
Background: Most pediatric cancers are considered immunologically cold with relatively few responding to immune checkpoint inhibition. We recently described an effective combination radio-immunotherapy treatment regimen ( c ombination a daptive- i nnate immunotherapy r egimen (CAIR)) targeting adaptive and innate immunity in 9464D-GD2, an immunologically cold model of neuroblastoma. Here, we characterize the mechanism of CAIR and the role of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) in the treatment response., Methods: Mice bearing GD2-expressing 9464D-GD2 tumors were treated with CAIR (external beam radiotherapy, hu14.18-IL2 immunocytokine, CpG, anti-CD40, and anti-CTLA4) and tumor growth and survival were tracked. Depletion of specific immune cell lineages, as well as testing in immunodeficient R2G2 mice, were used to determine the populations necessary for treatment efficacy. Induction of MHC-I expression in 9464D-GD2 cells in response to interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and CAIR was measured in vitro and in vivo , respectively, by flow cytometry and quantitative real-time PCR. A cell line with IFN-γ-inducible MHC-I expression (9464D-GD2-I) was generated by transfecting a subclone of the parental cell line capable of expressing MHC-I with GD2 synthase and was used in vivo to assess the impact of MHC-I expression on responsiveness to CAIR., Results: CAIR cures some mice bearing small (50 mm
3 ) but not larger (100 mm3 ) 9464D-GD2 tumors and these cured mice develop weak memory responses against tumor rechallenge. Early suppression of 9464D-GD2 tumors by CAIR does not require T or natural killer (NK) cells, but eventual tumor cures are NK cell dependent. Unlike the parental 9464D cell line, 9464D-GD2 cells have uniformly very low MHC-I expression at baseline and fail to upregulate expression in response to IFN-γ. In contrast, 9464D-GD2-I upregulates MHC-I in response to IFN-γ and is less responsive to CAIR., Conclusion: Treatment with CAIR cures 9464D-GD2 tumors in a NK cell dependent manner and induction of MHC-I by tumors cells was associated with decreased efficacy. These results demonstrate that the early tumor response to this regimen is T and NK cell independent, but that NK cells have a role in generating lasting cures in the absence of MHC-I expression by tumor cells. Further strategies to better inhibit tumor outgrowth in this setting may require further NK activation or the ability to engage alternative immune effector cells., Competing Interests: Competing interests: SDG declares employment and ownership interests in Provenance Biopharmaceuticals., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2022
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38. Using Radiation Therapy to Prime and Propagate an Anti-tumor Immune Response Against Brain Tumors.
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Onate AJ, Clark PA, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Humans, Immunity, Immunotherapy, Tumor Microenvironment, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Immunotherapies have demonstrated efficacy and survival benefits in some patients suffering from brain tumors; however, most do not respond and new approaches to enhance anti-tumor immunotherapeutic responses in the brain are needed. Radiotherapy remains a commonly used cancer treatment modality and can augment immunotherapeutic responses through multiple mechanisms. Recent preclinical studies may provide insight on how to optimally combine radiation and immunotherapies to maximize treatment efficacy. Unique aspects of the brain tumor microenvironment may play a critical role in limiting the successful application of immunotherapies in this location. Emerging studies suggest that such limits may be redressed through combination of immunotherapies with radiation therapy. In these settings, the latter may play a critical role in immunomodulating both tumor cells and the radiated brain tumor microenvironment. This review analyzes recent developments in combining radiation and immunotherapies to prime and better propagate anti-tumor immune response against brain tumors., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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39. The Role of MRI-Guided Radiotherapy for Soft Tissue Sarcomas.
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Blitzer GC, Yadav P, and Morris ZS
- Abstract
Soft tissue sarcomas (STS) are a rare class of tumors that originate from mesenchymal tissues and occur most frequently in the extremities, trunk, and retroperitoneum. Surgical resection with R0 margins is the primary curative treatment for most localized STS. In this setting, radiation therapy is used either pre-operatively or post-operatively to reduce the rate of local recurrence. Modern pre- or post-operative radiation therapy rely on the use of MRI sequences to guide target delineation during treatment planning. MRI-guided radiotherapy also offers unique advantages over CT-guided approaches in differentiating STS from surrounding normal soft tissues and enabling better identification of target volumes on daily imaging. For patients with unresectable STS, radiation therapy may offer the best chance for local tumor control. However, most STS are relatively radioresistant with modest rates of local control achieved using conventionally fractionated radiation. Specialized techniques such as hypofractionated radiation may allow for dose intensification and may increase rates of local control for STS. In these settings, MRI becomes even more critical for the delineation of targets and organs at risk and management of tumor and organ at risk motion during and between radiotherapy treatment fractions.
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- 2022
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40. Prospective Clinical Investigation of the Efficacy of Combination Radiation Therapy With Immune Checkpoint Inhibition.
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Akama-Garren EH, Morris ZS, Sikora AG, Weichselbaum R, and Schoenfeld JD
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- Combined Modality Therapy, Humans, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors, Immunologic Factors, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Immunotherapy
- Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) lead to durable responses in a subset of patients with cancer, but most patients do not respond to ICI, prompting interest in combining immunotherapy with other therapeutic regimens. Preclinical evidence supports the potential for therapeutic synergy between immunotherapy and radiation therapy through modulation of the tumor microenvironment and antitumor immune responses. Local therapy also has the potential to overcome localized sites of relative immune suppression and resistance. Prospective clinical trials have been initiated to test these hypotheses in the clinic as well as to investigate the toxicities and adverse events associated with combination immunotherapy and radiation therapy. In this review, we discuss the emerging results from prospective clinical trials of combination immunotherapy and radiation therapy, the safety and efficacy of their combination, concordance with preclinical and retrospective data, and some of the remaining open questions to be addressed by future clinical trials., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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41. Radiation Augments the Local Anti-Tumor Effect of In Situ Vaccine With CpG-Oligodeoxynucleotides and Anti-OX40 in Immunologically Cold Tumor Models.
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Pieper AA, Zangl LM, Speigelman DV, Feils AS, Hoefges A, Jagodinsky JC, Felder MA, Tsarovsky NW, Arthur IS, Brown RJ, Birstler J, Le T, Carlson PM, Bates AM, Hank JA, Rakhmilevich AL, Erbe AK, Sondel PM, Patel RB, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Combined Modality Therapy, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating immunology, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Neoplasms, Experimental immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology, Tumor Microenvironment, Cancer Vaccines immunology, Neoplasms, Experimental radiotherapy, Oligodeoxyribonucleotides therapeutic use, Receptors, OX40 immunology
- Abstract
Introduction: Combining CpG oligodeoxynucleotides with anti-OX40 agonist antibody (CpG+OX40) is able to generate an effective in situ vaccine in some tumor models, including the A20 lymphoma model. Immunologically "cold" tumors, which are typically less responsive to immunotherapy, are characterized by few tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), low mutation burden, and limited neoantigen expression. Radiation therapy (RT) can change the tumor microenvironment (TME) of an immunologically "cold" tumor. This study investigated the effect of combining RT with the in situ vaccine CpG+OX40 in immunologically "cold" tumor models., Methods: Mice bearing flank tumors (A20 lymphoma, B78 melanoma or 4T1 breast cancer) were treated with combinations of local RT, CpG, and/or OX40, and response to treatment was monitored. Flow cytometry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) experiments were conducted to study differences in the TME, secondary lymphoid organs, and immune activation after treatment., Results: An in situ vaccine regimen of CpG+OX40, which was effective in the A20 model, did not significantly improve tumor response or survival in the "cold" B78 and 4T1 models, as tested here. In both models, treatment with RT prior to CpG+OX40 enabled a local response to this in situ vaccine, significantly improving the anti-tumor response and survival compared to RT alone or CpG+OX40 alone. RT increased OX40 expression on tumor infiltrating CD4+ non-regulatory T cells. RT+CpG+OX40 increased the ratio of tumor-infiltrating effector T cells to T regulatory cells and significantly increased CD4+ and CD8+ T cell activation in the tumor draining lymph node (TDLN) and spleen., Conclusion: RT significantly improves the local anti-tumor effect of the in situ vaccine CpG+OX40 in immunologically "cold", solid, murine tumor models where RT or CpG+OX40 alone fail to stimulate tumor regression., Competing Interests: ZM is a member of the scientific advisory board for Archeus Technologies and Seneca Therapeutics and received equity options for these companies. ZM is an inventor on patents or filed patents managed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation relating to the interaction of targeted radionuclide therapies and immunotherapies, nanoparticles designed to augment the anti-tumor immune response following radiation therapy, and the development of a brachytherapy catheter capable of delivering intra-tumor injectables. PS is an inventor on patents or filed patents managed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation relating to mAb-related immunotherapies and the interaction of targeted radionuclide therapies and immunotherapies. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The reviewer WS declared a shared affiliation with one of the authors, RP, to the handling editor at the time of the review., (Copyright © 2021 Pieper, Zangl, Speigelman, Feils, Hoefges, Jagodinsky, Felder, Tsarovsky, Arthur, Brown, Birstler, Le, Carlson, Bates, Hank, Rakhmilevich, Erbe, Sondel, Patel and Morris.)
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- 2021
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42. Toward magnetic resonance fingerprinting for low-field MR-guided radiation therapy.
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Mickevicius NJ, Kim JP, Zhao J, Morris ZS, Hurst NJ Jr, and Glide-Hurst CK
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- Brain, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Phantoms, Imaging, Benchmarking, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
Purpose: The acquisition of multiparametric quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (qMRI) is becoming increasingly important for functional characterization of cancer prior to- and throughout the course of radiation therapy. The feasibility of a qMRI method known as magnetic resonance fingerprinting (MRF) for rapid T
1 and T2 mapping was assessed on a low-field MR-linac system., Methods: A three-dimensional MRF sequence was implemented on a 0.35T MR-guided radiotherapy system. MRF-derived measurements of T1 and T2 were compared to those obtained with gold standard single spin echo methods, and the impacts of the radiofrequency field homogeneity and scan times ranging between 6 and 48 min were analyzed by acquiring between 1 and 8 spokes per time point in a standard quantitative system phantom. The short-term repeatability of MRF was assessed over three measurements taken over a 10-h period. To evaluate transferability, MRF measurements were acquired on two additional MR-guided radiotherapy systems. Preliminary human volunteer studies were performed., Results: The phantom benchmarking studies showed that MRF is capable of mapping T1 and T2 values within 8% and 10% of gold standard measures, respectively, at 0.35T. The coefficient of variation of T1 and T2 estimates over three repeated scans was < 5% over a broad range of relaxation times. The T1 and T2 times derived using a single-spoke MRF acquisition across three scanners were near unity and mean percent errors in T1 and T2 estimates using the same phantom were < 3%. The mean percent differences in T1 and T2 as a result of truncating the scan time to 6 min over the large range of relaxation times in the system phantom were 0.65% and 4.05%, respectively., Conclusions: The technical feasibility and accuracy of MRF on a low-field MR-guided radiation therapy device has been demonstrated. MRF can be used to measure accurate T1 and T2 maps in three dimensions from a brief 6-min scan, offering strong potential for efficient and reproducible qMRI for future clinical trials in functional plan adaptation and tumor/normal tissue response assessment., (© 2021 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)- Published
- 2021
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43. Safety and feasibility of an in situ vaccination and immunomodulatory targeted radionuclide combination immuno-radiotherapy approach in a comparative (companion dog) setting.
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Magee K, Marsh IR, Turek MM, Grudzinski J, Aluicio-Sarduy E, Engle JW, Kurzman ID, Zuleger CL, Oseid EA, Jaskowiak C, Albertini MR, Esbona K, Bednarz B, Sondel PM, Weichert JP, Morris ZS, Hernandez R, and Vail DM
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Monoclonal adverse effects, Bone Marrow chemistry, Bone Marrow metabolism, Bone Marrow pathology, Combined Modality Therapy, Dogs, Feasibility Studies, Female, Gene Expression, Interleukin-2 adverse effects, Leukocytes, Mononuclear cytology, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating cytology, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating metabolism, Male, Melanoma immunology, Melanoma pathology, Melanoma veterinary, Osteosarcoma immunology, Osteosarcoma veterinary, Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography, Radiopharmaceuticals adverse effects, Radiopharmaceuticals chemistry, Vaccination, Yttrium Radioisotopes chemistry, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Interleukin-2 therapeutic use, Melanoma therapy, Osteosarcoma therapy, Radiopharmaceuticals therapeutic use
- Abstract
Rationale: Murine syngeneic tumor models have revealed efficacious systemic antitumor responses following primary tumor in situ vaccination combined with targeted radionuclide therapy to secondary or metastatic tumors. Here we present studies on the safety and feasibility of this approach in a relevant translational companion dog model (n = 17 dogs) with advanced cancer., Methods: The three component of the combination immuno-radiotherapy approach were employed either separately or in combination in companion dogs with advanced stage cancer. In situ vaccination was achieved through the administration of hypofractionated external beam radiotherapy and intratumoral hu14.18-IL2 fusion immunocytokine injections to the index tumor. In situ vaccination was subsequently combined with targeted radionuclide therapy using a theranostic pairing of IV 86Y-NM600 (for PET imaging and subject-specific dosimetry) and IV 90Y-NM600 (therapeutic radionuclide) prescribed to deliver an immunomodulatory 2 Gy dose to all metastatic sites in companion dogs with metastatic melanoma or osteosarcoma. In a subset of dogs, immunologic parameters preliminarily assessed., Results: The components of the immuno-radiotherapy combination were well tolerated either alone or in combination, resulting in only transient low grade (1 or 2) adverse events with no dose-limiting events observed. In subject-specific dosimetry analyses, we observed 86Y-NM600 tumor:bone marrow absorbed-dose differential uptakes ≥2 in 4 of 5 dogs receiving the combination, which allowed subsequent safe delivery of at least 2 Gy 90Y-NM600 TRT to tumors. NanoString gene expression profiling and immunohistochemistry from pre- and post-treatment biopsy specimens provide evidence of tumor microenvironment immunomodulation by 90Y-NM600 TRT., Conclusions: The combination of external beam radiotherapy, intratumoral immunocytokine, and targeted radionuclide immuno-radiotherapy known to have activity against syngeneic melanoma in murine models is feasible and well tolerated in companion dogs with advanced stage, spontaneously arising melanoma or osteosarcoma and has immunomodulatory potential. Further studies evaluating the dose-dependent immunomodulatory effects of this immuno-radiotherapy combination are currently ongoing., Competing Interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following compeXng interests: ZM – Scientific Advisory Board Member and equity options, Archeus Technologies, Scientific Advisory Board Member and equity options, Seneca Therapeutics, Research Material support (reagents) from Bristol-Myers Squibb, AstraZeneca, Nektar Therapeutics, Apeiron Biologics, XRAd Therapeutics. BB and JG has ownership interest in Voximetry Inc (Middleton, WI). MRA - Research collaborations through the University of Wisconsin with Bristol Myers Squibb (Redwood City, CA and Princeton, NJ) and with Apeiron Biologics (Vienna, Austria). JW is a co-founder and CSO of Archeus Technologies, Inc (Madison, WI). This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
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- 2021
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44. Targeted Alpha-Particle Radiotherapy and Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors Induces Cooperative Inhibition on Tumor Growth of Malignant Melanoma.
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Li M, Liu D, Lee D, Cheng Y, Baumhover NJ, Marks BM, Sagastume EA, Ballas ZK, Johnson FL, Morris ZS, and Schultz MK
- Abstract
Radiotherapy can facilitate the immune recognition of immunologically "cold" tumors and enhance the efficacy of anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in melanoma. Systemic administration of receptor-targeted radionuclide therapy has the potential to selectively deliver radionuclides to multiple tumors throughout the body in metastatic settings. By triggering immunologic cell death and increasing the immune susceptibility of surviving tumor cells in these locations, targeted radionuclide therapies may overcome resistance to ICIs and render immunologically "cold" tumors throughout the body responsive to ICIs and immunologically "hot". Here, we show the anti-tumor cooperation of targeted α-particle radionuclide therapy (α-TRT) and ICIs in preclinical models of melanoma. Melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R)-targeted radiopeptide [
212 Pb]VMT01 was employed to deliver α-radiation to melanoma tumors in mice. A single injection of 4.1 MBq [212 Pb]VMT01 significantly slowed the tumor growth of B16-F10 melanoma and the combination of [212 Pb]VMT01 and ICIs induced a cooperative anti-tumor effect leading to 43% complete tumor response with no sign of malignancy on autopsy. Animals with complete response developed anti-tumor immunity to reject further tumor inoculations. This therapeutic cooperation was completely abolished in RAG1 KO mice, which are deficient in T-cell maturation. In addition, the anti-tumor cooperation was compromised when fractionated [212 Pb]VMT01 was used in the combination. We also demonstrated that [212 Pb]VMT01 induced immunogenic cell death in tumor vaccination assays and in vitro exposure to [212 Pb]VMT01 sensitized immunotolerant melanoma to ICIs treatment in vivo. Enhanced tumor infiltrating CD3+ , CD4+ , CD8+ lymphocytes were observed following injection of 1.4 MBq [212 Pb]VMT01. Overall, we demonstrated anti-tumor cooperation between α-TRT and ICIs in melanoma that is mediated by tumor specific immunity.- Published
- 2021
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45. Optimizing Flow Cytometric Analysis of Immune Cells in Samples Requiring Cryopreservation from Tumor-Bearing Mice.
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Carlson PM, Mohan M, Patel RB, Birstler J, Nettenstrom L, Sheerar D, Fox K, Rodriguez M, Hoefges A, Hernandez R, Zahm C, Kim K, McNeel DG, Weichert J, Morris ZS, and Sondel PM
- Subjects
- Animals, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Cell Line, Tumor, Immunophenotyping methods, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Natural Killer T-Cells immunology, Pandemics, Signal Transduction immunology, Tumor Microenvironment immunology, Cryopreservation methods, Flow Cytometry methods, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Melanoma, Experimental pathology, Myeloid Cells immunology
- Abstract
Most shared resource flow cytometry facilities do not permit analysis of radioactive samples. We are investigating low-dose molecular targeted radionuclide therapy (MTRT) as an immunomodulator in combination with in situ tumor vaccines and need to analyze radioactive samples from MTRT-treated mice using flow cytometry. Further, the sudden shutdown of core facilities in response to the COVID-19 pandemic has created an unprecedented work stoppage. In these and other research settings, a robust and reliable means of cryopreservation of immune samples is required. We evaluated different fixation and cryopreservation protocols of disaggregated tumor cells with the aim of identifying a protocol for subsequent flow cytometry of the thawed sample, which most accurately reflects the flow cytometric analysis of the tumor immune microenvironment of a freshly disaggregated and analyzed sample. Cohorts of C57BL/6 mice bearing B78 melanoma tumors were evaluated using dual lymphoid and myeloid immunophenotyping panels involving fixation and cryopreservation at three distinct points during the workflow. Results demonstrate that freezing samples after all staining and fixation are completed most accurately matches the results from noncryopreserved equivalent samples. We observed that cryopreservation of living, unfixed cells introduces a nonuniform alteration to PD1 expression. We confirm the utility of our cryopreservation protocol by comparing tumors treated with in situ tumor vaccines, analyzing both fresh and cryopreserved tumor samples with similar results. Last, we use this cryopreservation protocol with radioactive specimens to demonstrate potentially beneficial effector cell changes to the tumor immune microenvironment following administration of a novel MTRT in a dose- and time-dependent manner., (Copyright © 2021 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.)
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- 2021
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46. Low-dose targeted radionuclide therapy renders immunologically cold tumors responsive to immune checkpoint blockade.
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Patel RB, Hernandez R, Carlson P, Grudzinski J, Bates AM, Jagodinsky JC, Erbe A, Marsh IR, Arthur I, Aluicio-Sarduy E, Sriramaneni RN, Jin WJ, Massey C, Rakhmilevich AL, Vail D, Engle JW, Le T, Kim K, Bednarz B, Sondel PM, Weichert J, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Dogs, Immunotherapy, Mice, Radioisotopes, Tumor Protein, Translationally-Controlled 1, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors
- Abstract
Molecular and cellular effects of radiotherapy on tumor microenvironment (TME) can help prime and propagate antitumor immunity. We hypothesized that delivering radiation to all tumor sites could augment response to immunotherapies. We tested an approach to enhance response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) by using targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT) to deliver radiation semiselectively to tumors. NM600, an alkylphosphocholine analog that preferentially accumulates in most tumor types, chelates a radioisotope and semiselectively delivers it to the TME for therapeutic or diagnostic applications. Using serial
86 Y-NM600 positron emission tomography (PET) imaging, we estimated the dosimetry of90 Y-NM600 in immunologically cold syngeneic murine models that do not respond to ICIs alone. We observed strong therapeutic efficacy and reported optimal dose (2.5 to 5 gray) and sequence for90 Y-NM600 in combination with ICIs. After combined treatment, 45 to 66% of mice exhibited complete response and tumor-specific T cell memory, compared to 0% with90 Y-NM600 or ICI alone. This required expression of STING in tumor cells. Combined TRT and ICI activated production of proinflammatory cytokines in the TME, promoted tumor infiltration by and clonal expansion of CD8+ T cells, and reduced metastases. In mice bearing multiple tumors, combining TRT with moderate-dose (12 gray) external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) targeting a single tumor augmented response to ICIs compared to combination of ICIs with either TRT or EBRT alone. The safety of TRT was confirmed in a companion canine study. Low-dose TRT represents a translatable approach to promote response to ICIs for many tumor types, regardless of location., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.)- Published
- 2021
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47. A multipurpose brachytherapy catheter to enable intratumoral injection.
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Jagodinsky JC, Medeiros G, Raj HH, Razuan A, Locsin A, Dempsey TG, Tang B, Chakravarty I, Clark PA, Sriramaneni RN, Jin WJ, Lan KH, Das RK, Miller JR, Suarez-Gonzalez D, and Morris ZS
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- Animals, Catheters, Humans, Injections, Intralesional, Mice, Phantoms, Imaging, Radiometry, Brachytherapy methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To create and test a multipurpose brachytherapy catheter prototype enabling intratumoral injection and brachytherapy after a single catheter insertion., Methods and Materials: The design of the prototype consists of an outer tube and an inner syringe tube that can be filled with injectable agent. The outer sheath and inner syringe tube were constructed using polytetrafluoroethylene tubing, and the other components were 3D printed using dental resin and polylactic acid material. To demonstrate functionality, we injected in vitro phantoms with dyed saline. For proof of concept, we demonstrated the potential for the prototype to deliver cell therapy, enhance tumor delineation, deliver tattoo ink for pathology marking, avoid toxicity through local delivery of chemotherapy, and facilitate combination brachytherapy and immunotherapy., Results: The prototype enables accurate injection in vitro and in vivo without altering dosimetry. To illustrate the potential for delivery of cell therapies, we injected luciferase-expressing splenocytes and confirmed their delivery with bioluminescence imaging. To demonstrate feasibility of radiographically visualizing injected material, we delivered iohexol contrast intratumorally and confirmed tumor retention using Faxitron x-ray imaging. In addition, we show the potential of intratumoral administration to reduce toxicity associated with cyclophosphamide compared with systemic administration. To demonstrate feasibility, we treated tumor-bearing mice with brachytherapy (
192 Ir source, 2 Gy to 5 mm) in combination with intratumoral injection of 375,000 U of interleukin 2 and observed no increased toxicity., Conclusions: These results demonstrate that a prototype multipurpose brachytherapy catheter enables accurate intratumoral injection and support the feasibility of combining intratumoral injection with brachytherapy., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)- Published
- 2021
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48. Low-Dose Radiation Potentiates the Propagation of Anti-Tumor Immunity against Melanoma Tumor in the Brain after In Situ Vaccination at a Tumor outside the Brain.
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Clark PA, Sriramaneni RN, Bates AM, Jin WJ, Jagodinsky JC, Hernandez R, Le T, Jeffery JJ, Marsh IR, Grudzinski JJ, Aluicio-Sarduy E, Barnhart TE, Anderson BR, Chakravarty I, Arthur IS, Kim K, Engle JW, Bednarz BP, Weichert JP, and Morris ZS
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain Neoplasms prevention & control, Cell Line, Tumor, Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors pharmacology, Immunity drug effects, Melanoma, Experimental prevention & control, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Tumor Protein, Translationally-Controlled 1, Brain Neoplasms immunology, Immunity radiation effects, Melanoma, Experimental immunology, Vaccination
- Abstract
Brain metastases develop in over 60% of advanced melanoma patients and negatively impact quality of life and prognosis. In a murine melanoma model, we previously showed that an in situ vaccination (ISV) regimen, combining radiation treatment and intratumoral (IT) injection of immunocytokine (IC: anti-GD2 antibody fused to IL2), along with the immune checkpoint inhibitor anti-CTLA-4, robustly eliminates peripheral flank tumors but only has modest effects on co-occurring intracranial tumors. In this study, we investigated the ability of low-dose radiation to the brain to potentiate anti-tumor immunity against a brain tumor when combined with ISV + anti-CTLA-4. B78 (GD2+, immunologically "cold") melanoma tumor cells were implanted into the flank and the right striatum of the brain in C57BL/6 mice. Flank tumors (50-150 mm3) were treated following a previously optimized ISV regimen [radiation (12 Gy × 1, treatment day 1), IT-IC (50 µg daily, treatment days 6-10), and anti-CTLA-4 (100 µg, treatment days 3, 6, 9)]. Mice that additionally received whole-brain radiation treatment (WBRT, 4 Gy × 1) on day 15 demonstrated significantly increased survival compared to animals that received ISV + anti-CTLA-4 alone, WBRT alone or no treatment (control) (P < 0.001, log-rank test). Timing of WBRT was critical, as WBRT administration on day 1 did not significantly enhance survival compared to ISV + anti-CTLA-4, suggesting that the effect of WBRT on survival might be mediated through immune modulation and not just direct tumor cell cytotoxicity. Modest increases in T cells (CD8+ and CD4+) and monocytes/macrophages (F4/80+) but no changes in FOXP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs), were observed in brain melanoma tumors with addition of WBRT (on day 15) to ISV + anti-CTLA-4. Cytokine multiplex immunoassay revealed distinct changes in both intracranial melanoma and contralateral normal brain with addition of WBRT (day 15) to ISV + anti-CTLA-4, with notable significant changes in pro-inflammatory (e.g., IFNγ, TNFα and LIX/CXCL5) and suppressive (e.g., IL10, IL13) cytokines as well as chemokines (e.g., IP-10/CXCL10 and MIG/CXCL9). We tested the ability of the alkylphosphocholine analog, NM600, to deliver immunomodulatory radiation to melanoma brain tumors as a targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT). Yttrium-86 (86Y) chelated to NM600 was delivered intravenously by tail vein to mice harboring flank and brain melanoma tumors, and PET imaging demonstrated specific accumulation up to 72 h at each tumor site (∼12:1 brain tumor/brain and ∼8:1 flank tumor/muscle). When NM600 was chelated to therapeutic β-particle-emitting 90Y and administered on treatment day 13, T-cell infiltration and cytokine profiles were altered in melanoma brain tumor, like that observed for WBRT. Overall, our results demonstrate that addition of low-dose radiation, timed appropriately with ISV administration to tumors outside the brain, significantly increases survival in animals co-harboring melanoma brain tumors. This observation has potentially important translational implications as a treatment strategy for increasing the response of tumors in the brain to systemically administered immunotherapies., (©2021 by Radiation Research Society. All rights of reproduction in any form reserved.)
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- 2021
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49. Combination of radiation therapy, bempegaldesleukin, and checkpoint blockade eradicates advanced solid tumors and metastases in mice.
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Pieper AA, Rakhmilevich AL, Spiegelman DV, Patel RB, Birstler J, Jin WJ, Carlson PM, Charych DH, Hank JA, Erbe AK, Overwijk WW, Morris ZS, and Sondel PM
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Humans, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors pharmacology, Interleukin-2 pharmacology, Interleukin-2 therapeutic use, Mice, Neoplasm Metastasis, Polyethylene Glycols pharmacology, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors therapeutic use, Interleukin-2 analogs & derivatives, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms radiotherapy, Polyethylene Glycols therapeutic use, Radiotherapy methods
- Abstract
Background: Current clinical trials are using radiation therapy (RT) to enhance an antitumor response elicited by high-dose interleukin (IL)-2 therapy or immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). Bempegaldesleukin (BEMPEG) is an investigational CD122-preferential IL-2 pathway agonist with prolonged in vivo half-life and preferential intratumoral expansion of T effector cells over T regulatory cells. BEMPEG has shown encouraging safety and efficacy in clinical trials when used in combination with PD-1 checkpoint blockade. In this study, we investigated the antitumor effect of local RT combined with BEMPEG in multiple immunologically 'cold' tumor models. Additionally, we asked if ICB could further enhance the local and distant antitumor effect of RT+BEMPEG in the setting of advanced solid tumors or metastatic disease., Methods: Mice bearing flank tumors (B78 melanoma, 4T1 breast cancer, or MOC2 head and neck squamous cell carcinoma) were treated with combinations of RT and immunotherapy (including BEMPEG, high-dose IL-2, anti(α)-CTLA-4, and α-PD-L1). Mice bearing B78 flank tumors were injected intravenously with B16 melanoma cells to mimic metastatic disease and were subsequently treated with RT and/or immunotherapy. Tumor growth and survival were monitored. Peripheral T cells and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes were assessed via flow cytometry., Results: A cooperative antitumor effect was observed in all models when RT was combined with BEMPEG, and RT increased IL-2 receptor expression on peripheral T cells. This cooperative interaction was associated with increased IL-2 receptor expression on peripheral T cells following RT. In the B78 melanoma model, RT+BEMPEG resulted in complete tumor regression in the majority of mice with a single ~400 mm
3 tumor. This antitumor response was T-cell dependent and supported by long-lasting immune memory. Adding ICB to RT+BEMPEG strengthened the antitumor response and cured the majority of mice with a single ~1000 mm3 B78 tumor. In models with disseminated metastasis (B78 primary with B16 metastasis, 4T1, and MOC2), the triple combination of RT, BEMPEG, and ICB significantly improved primary tumor response and survival., Conclusion: The combination of local RT, BEMPEG, and ICB cured mice with advanced, immunologically cold tumors and distant metastasis in a T cell-dependent manner, suggesting this triple combination warrants clinical testing., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2021
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50. Quantification and molecular imaging of fatty acid isomers from complex biological samples by mass spectrometry.
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Zhang H, Xu M, Shi X, Liu Y, Li Z, Jagodinsky JC, Ma M, Welham NV, Morris ZS, and Li L
- Abstract
Elucidating the isomeric structure of free fatty acids (FAs) in biological samples is essential to comprehend their biological functions in various physiological and pathological processes. Herein, we report a novel approach of using peracetic acid (PAA) induced epoxidation coupled with mass spectrometry (MS) for localization of the C[double bond, length as m-dash]C bond in unsaturated FAs, which enables both quantification and spatial visualization of FA isomers from biological samples. Abundant diagnostic fragment ions indicative of the C[double bond, length as m-dash]C positions were produced upon fragmentation of the FA epoxides derived from either in-solution or on-tissue PAA epoxidation of free FAs. The performance of the proposed approach was evaluated by analysis of FAs in human cell lines as well as mapping the FA isomers from cancer tissue samples with MALDI-TOF/TOF-MS. Merits of the newly developed method include high sensitivity, simplicity, high reaction efficiency, and capability of spatial characterization of FA isomers in tissue samples., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)
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- 2021
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