Abstract

AbstractThe combination therapy of targeted drugs and immune checkpoint inhibitors has shown prominent success. In addition to blocking mutated oncogene downstream signaling, the immunological mechanism(s) underlying the anti‐tumor effect of targeted‐immuno‐therapy is not clear. In this study, anlotinib, a novel pan‐targeted tyrosine kinase receptor inhibitor (pTKI), is combined with anti‐PD1 (αPD1) as a therapeutic regimen applying to an immunocompetent mouse tumor model. Anlotinib induces immunogenic cell death (ICD), elicits anti‐tumor inflammation and infiltration, and activation of DCs and CD8+ T cells, which are enhanced by αPD1. Furthermore, anlotinib reduces KC/MCP‐1 secretion by attenuating educational effect that cancer cells imposed on tumor‐associated macrophages (TAMs) and prevents their M2 polarization by inhibiting AKT/mTORC1 and Pparδ pathways. Importantly, anlotinib plus αPD1 prolongs median progression‐free survival time compared with standard chemotherapy plus pembrolizumab as the 1st line treatment in non‐small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Thus, anlotinib treatment elicits both innate and adaptive anti‐tumor immune responses while αPD1 enhances its potency. This study provides strong evidence that combination of targeted therapy and immunotherapy is a promising regimen for treating NSCLC.

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