Litcius/Paper detail

Downregulating testosterone levels enhance immunotherapy efficiency

Luoyang Wang, Guoqiang Jiang, Nan Jing, Xuerun Liu, Huiren Zhuang, Wenfeng Zeng, Wei Liang, Zheng Liu

2021OncoImmunology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Low response rates to certain tumor types remain a major challenge for immune checkpoint blockade therapy. In this study, we first conducted an integrated biomarker evaluation of bladder cancer patients from confirmatory cohorts (IMvigor210) and found that no significant differences exist between sexes before acceptance of anti-PD-L1 treatment, whereas male patients showed a better response. Thus, we then focused on sex-related changes post anti-PD-L1 treatment and found no obvious impact on the gut microbiota in male mice but a significant decrease in the sex hormone levels. Further, castration dramatically enhanced the antitumor efficacy against murine colon adenocarcinoma in male mice. Moreover, a narrow-spectrum antibiotic, colistin was innovatively used for deregulation of testosterone levels to enhance the immunotherapy efficiency in male mice. These findings indicate that the impact on the sex hormone levels in males may contribute to the sexual dimorphism in response and provide a promising way to enhance immunotherapy efficiency.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunotherapyTestosterone (patch)MedicineProstate cancerImmune systemBiomarkerHormoneBlockadeSex hormone-binding globulinCancerInternal medicineImmune checkpointHormone therapyOncologyImmunologyAndrogenBiologyReceptorBiochemistryBreast cancerCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersImmune Cell Function and InteractionBladder and Urothelial Cancer Treatments