Abstract

Abstract Near infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a newly developed cancer treatment that employs a targeted monoclonal antibody-photo-absorber conjugate (APC). Following antibody localization of the APC to a tumor cell surface antigen, NIR light is used to induce highly selective cytolysis. Extensive pre-clinical evidence demonstrates that NIR-PIT is effective at inducing tumor cell lysis using a number of different antibody-APC conjugates and NIR-PIT targeting EGFR with a cetuximab-APC conjugate has shown promising results in phase 2 clinical evaluation for the treatment of recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. NIR-PIT induces rapid, necrotic cell death that yields innate immune ligands that activate dendritic cells, consistent with immunogenic cell death. Yet, NIR-PIT treatment of syngeneic tumors in wild-type mice has mostly failed to induce durable regression of established tumors, suggesting the presence of one or more mechanisms of resistance to formation of meaningful anti-tumor immunity. In this study, we hypothesized that NIR-PIT could induce anti-tumor immunity that was being restricted by the PD-1/PD-L1 signaling axis, and that PD-1 could reverse innate immune resistance to induce durable, effective anti-tumor immune responses. Using a CD44-targeting APC, we demonstrated the ability of PD-1 immune checkpoint blockade to significantly enhance antigen-specific anti-tumor immunity induced by NIR-PIT in multiple syngeneic tumor models (MC38, LLC, and MOC1 cancer cell line). In two of three models, NIR-PIT monotherapy halted tumor growth, enhanced dendritic cell tumor infiltration, and induced de novo tumor antigen-specific T-cell responses absent at baseline. The addition of PD-1 blockade appeared to reverse adaptive immune resistance, resulting in both enhanced pre-existing tumor antigen-specific T-cell responses and enhanced de novo T-cell responses induced by NIR-PIT. Enhanced immune responses appeared to correlate with shared tumor antigen expression, suggesting that antigenicity is a major determinant of response to combination NIR-PIT and PD-1 blockade. Combination treatment induced complete rejection of MC38 tumors treated with NIR-PIT as well as untreated, distant tumors. Accordingly, tumor antigen-specific T-cell responses were measured in both treated and untreated tumors, validating the development of systemic anti-tumor immunity. Cured mice resisted tumor challenge, indicating the presence of systemic immune memory. Cumulatively these results demonstrate reversal of adaptive immune resistance following induction of innate and adaptive immunity by NIR-PIT, resulting in high rates of tumor rejection and/or significant tumor growth control in highly antigenic syngeneic models of cancer. Citation Format: Tadanobu Nagaya, Jay Friedman, Yasuhiro Maruoka, Fusa Ogata, Shuhei Okuyama, Paul E. Clavijo, Peter L. Choyke, Clint Allen, Hisataka Kobayashi. Host immunity following near infrared photoimmunotherapy is enhanced with PD-1 checkpoint blockade to eradicate established highly antigenic tumors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 3206.

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