Using proton radiation or OXi4503 to convert non-immunogenic tumours into immune responders
OC-0265
Abstract
Using proton radiation or OXi4503 to convert non-immunogenic tumours into immune responders
Authors: Michael Horsman1, Søren Nygaard1, Steffen Nielsen1, Mateusz Sitarz2, Per Poulsen2, Morten Høyer2, Brita Sørensen2, Pernille Elming1
1Aarhus University Hospital, Experimental Clinical Oncology-Dept. Oncology, Aarhus N, Denmark; 2Aarhus University Hospital, Danish Centre for Particle Therapy, Aarhus N, Denmark
Show Affiliations
Hide Affiliations
Purpose or Objective
Despite the success of
immunotherapy, many cancer patients do not respond to this therapy. The aim of
this pre-clinical study was to try and convert non-responding tumours into
responders using radiation that primarily kills tumour cells directly, but also
has an indirect effect through the induction of vascular damage. In addition,
we also used OXi4503, a drug that primarily induces vascular damage, but also
has a secondary direct cell killing effect.
Material and Methods
Experiments were performed
using a C3H mammary carcinoma grown in the right rear foot of CDF1 mice and
treatments started when tumours reached 200 mm3 (day 0). Treatments
included local tumour irradiation with single proton doses (5-20 Gy on day 0; given in an 83-107MeV pencil
scanning proton beam in the center of a 3 cm spread out Bragg peak), or the vascular disrupting
agent, OXi4503 (5-50 mg/kg injected i.p. on days 0, 3, 7 and 10). The radiation
and drug treatments were also combined with an antibody to the checkpoint
inhibitor CTLA-4 (10 mg/kg; i.p. injected on days 1, 4, 8, and 11). The
endpoint was tumour growth time (TGT3; time for tumours to grow to 3 times the
treatment volume). A Student’s T-test was
used for statistical comparisons (significance level of p<0.05).
Results
Untreated control tumours had
a mean (+ 1 S.E.) TGT3 of 4.3 days (+ 0.5). This was increased in
a dose dependent fashion when mice were treated with either protons or OXi4503.
Anti-CTLA-4 alone had no significant effect on tumour growth, the TGT3 being 3.9
days (+ 0.1). It also failed to enhance the response to proton irradiation
or OXi4503 until the highest doses were reached. With protons, a TGT3 value of
17.7 days (+ 0.7) was obtained with 20 Gy and this was significantly
increased to 22.4 days (+ 1.2) when combined with anti-CTLA-4. For OXi4503
the TGT3 at the 50 mg/kg dose was 15.8 days (+ 0.4), which significantly
increased to 24.2 days (+ 4.0) with anti-CTLA-4. Interestingly, larger
effects were seen when smaller tumours were used. Despite the significant
increase in TGT3 when mice bearing 200 mm3 tumours were treated with
OXi4503 and anti-CTLA-4, the number of tumours that were completely controlled
was 0/10. However, applying the treatments when tumours were 100 mm3
in size resulted in 2/9 tumours being controlled, and this level of control further
increased to 5/9 tumours when the tumours were at 50 mm3 when the
treatments started.
Conclusion
Tumours that are unresponsive to checkpoint inhibitors can become responsive after treatment with other therapies. While this effect appears to be independent of how tumor damage is induced, it does seem to depend on the level of damage caused and the size of the tumours at the start of treatment.
Supported by grants from the Danish Cancer Society,
the Danish Council for Independent Research: Medical Sciences, and The Danish National
Board of Health.