Preexisting antitumor immunity augments the antitumor effects of chemotherapy

被引:0
|
作者
Lingbing Zhang
Dongdong Feng
Lynda X. Yu
Kangla Tsung
Jeffrey A. Norton
机构
[1] Stanford University School of Medicine,Department of Surgery
来源
关键词
Chemotherapy; Interleukin-12; Immunity; Dendritic cells; Preexisting;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Efficacy of cancer chemotherapy is generally believed to be the result of direct drug killing of tumor cells. However, increased tumor cell killing does not always lead to improved efficacy. Herein, we demonstrate that the status of antitumor immunity at the time of chemotherapy treatment is a critical factor affecting the therapeutic outcome in that tumor-bearing mice that possess preexisting antitumor immunity respond to chemotherapy much better than those that do not. Enhancing antitumor immunity before or at the time of chemotherapy-induced antigen release increases subsequent response to chemotherapy significantly. By in vitro and in vivo measurements of antitumor immunity, we found a close correlation between the intensity of antitumor immunity activated by chemotherapy and the efficacy of treatment. Immune intervention with interleukin-12 during the early phase of chemotherapy-induced immune activation greatly amplifies the antitumor response, often resulting in complete tumor eradication not only at the chemo-treated local site, but also systemically. These findings provide additional evidence for an immune-mediated antitumor response to chemotherapy. Further, our results show that timely immune modification of chemotherapy-activated antitumor immunity can result in enhanced antitumor-immune response and complete tumor eradication.
引用
收藏
页码:1061 / 1071
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Gene Therapy with Beta-Defensin 2 Induces Antitumor Immunity and Enhances Local Antitumor Effects
    Li, Dan
    Wang, Wei
    Shi, Hua-shan
    Fu, Yi-jie
    Chen, Xiang
    Chen, Xian-cheng
    Liu, Yan-tong
    Kan, Bing
    Wang, Yong-sheng
    HUMAN GENE THERAPY, 2014, 25 (01) : 63 - 72
  • [32] Photodynamic Therapy and Antitumor Immunity
    Gollnick, Sandra O.
    JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL COMPREHENSIVE CANCER NETWORK, 2012, 10 : S40 - S43
  • [33] Intratumoral radiation dose heterogeneity augments antitumor immunity in mice and primes responses to checkpoint blockade
    Jagodinsky, Justin C.
    Vera, Jessica M.
    Jin, Won Jong
    Shea, Amanda G.
    Clark, Paul A.
    Sriramaneni, Raghava N.
    Havighurst, Thomas C.
    Chakravarthy, Ishan
    Allawi, Raad H.
    Kim, Kyungmann
    Harari, Paul M.
    Sondel, Paul M.
    Newton, Michael A.
    Crittenden, Marka R.
    Gough, Michael J.
    Miller, Jessica R.
    Ong, Irene M.
    Morris, Zachary S.
    SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 2024, 16 (765)
  • [34] Metabolic control of antitumor immunity
    Pouikli, Andromachi
    Frezza, Christian
    SCIENCE, 2023, 381 (6664) : 1287 - 1288
  • [35] Induction of antitumor immunity by indomethacin
    Morecki, S
    Yacovlev, E
    Gelfand, Y
    Trembovler, V
    Shohami, E
    Slavin, S
    CANCER IMMUNOLOGY IMMUNOTHERAPY, 2000, 48 (11) : 613 - 620
  • [36] STINGing Antitumor Immunity into Action
    Poh, Alissa
    CANCER DISCOVERY, 2018, 8 (03) : 259 - 260
  • [37] Induction of antitumor immunity by indomethacin
    Shoshana Morecki
    Elena Yacovlev
    Yael Gelfand
    Victoria Trembovler
    Esther Shohami
    Shimon Slavin
    Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy, 2000, 48 : 613 - 620
  • [38] Diet, lipids, and antitumor immunity
    Hannah Prendeville
    Lydia Lynch
    Cellular & Molecular Immunology, 2022, 19 : 432 - 444
  • [39] Stimulating antitumor immunity with nanoparticles
    Sheen, Mee Rie
    Lizotte, Patrick H.
    Toraya-Brown, Seiko
    Fiering, Steven
    WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-NANOMEDICINE AND NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY, 2014, 6 (05) : 496 - 505
  • [40] Potassium shapes antitumor immunity
    Baixauli, Francesc
    Villa, Matteo
    Pearce, Erika L.
    SCIENCE, 2019, 363 (6434) : 1395 - 1396