Abstract

We previously showed that a combination of differentiation-inducing agents (5-fluorouracil [5FU], vitamin D3 or methotrexate) and aminolevulinate-based photodynamic therapy (PDT) improves clinical responses by enhancing protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) photosensitizer levels and cell death. Here, we show that in addition to its previously known effects, 5FU enhances PDT-induced tumor-regressing immunity. Murine actinic keratoses were treated with topical 5FU or vehicle for 3 days prior to aminolevulinic acid application, followed by blue light illumination (~417 nm). Lesions were harvested for time-course analyses of innate immune cell recruitment into lesions, i.e. neutrophils (Ly6G+) and macrophages (F4/80+), which peaked at 72 h and 1 week post-PDT, respectively, and were greater in 5FU-treated lesions. Enhanced infiltration of activated T cells (CD3+) throughout the time course, and of cytotoxic T cells (CD8+) at 1-2 weeks post-PDT, also occurred in 5FU-treated lesions. 5FU pretreatment reduced the presence of cells expressing the immune checkpoint marker PD-1 at ~72 h post-PDT, favoring cytotoxic T cell activity. A combination of 5FU and PDT, each individually known to induce long-term tumor-targeting immune responses in addition to their more immediate effects on cancer cells, may synergize to provide better management of squamous precancers.

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