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Delayed tumor-draining lymph node irradiation preserves the efficacy of combined radiotherapy and immune checkpoint blockade in models of metastatic disease

Irma Telarović, Carmen S. Yong, Lisa Kurz, Irene Vetrugno, Sabrina Reichl, Alba Sanchez Fernandez, Hung‐Wei Cheng, Rona Winkler, Matthias Gückenberger, Anja Kipar, Burkhard Ludewig, Martin Pruschy

2024Nature Communications72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cancer resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors motivated investigations into leveraging the immunostimulatory properties of radiotherapy to overcome immune evasion and to improve treatment response. However, clinical benefits of radiotherapy-immunotherapy combinations have been modest. Routine concomitant tumor-draining lymph node irradiation (DLN IR) might be the culprit. As crucial sites for generating anti-tumor immunity, DLNs are indispensable for the in situ vaccination effect of radiotherapy. Simultaneously, DLN sparing is often not feasible due to metastatic spread. Using murine models of metastatic disease in female mice, here we demonstrate that delayed (adjuvant), but not neoadjuvant, DLN IR overcomes the detrimental effect of concomitant DLN IR on the efficacy of radio-immunotherapy. Moreover, we identify IR-induced disruption of the CCR7-CCL19/CCL21 homing axis as a key mechanism for the detrimental effect of DLN IR. Our study proposes delayed DLN IR as a strategy to maximize the efficacy of radio-immunotherapy across different tumor types and disease stages.

Topics & Concepts

Immune checkpointRadiation therapyCancer researchImmunotherapyMedicineCCL19Lymph nodeAdjuvantConcomitantImmune systemTumor microenvironmentAbscopal effectImmunologyOncologyInternal medicineChemokineChemokine receptorCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesCancer, Stress, Anesthesia, and Immune Response