Abstract
BackgroundGlioblastomas (GBM) are therapy-resistant tumors with a profoundly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Chemotherapy has shown limited efficacy against GBM. Systemic delivery of chemotherapeutic drugs is hampered by the difficulty of achieving intratumoral levels as systemic toxicity is a dose-limiting factor. Although some of its effects might be mediated by immune reactivity, systemic chemotherapy can also inhibit induced or spontaneous antitumor immune reactivity. Convection-enhanced delivery of temozolomide (CED-TMZ) can tentatively increase intratumoral drug concentration while reducing systemic side effects. The objective of this study was to evaluate the therapeutic effect of intratumorally delivered temozolomide in combination with immunotherapy and whether such therapy can generate a cellular antitumor immune response.MethodsSingle bolus intratumoral injection and 3-day mini-osmotic pumps (Alzet®) were used to deliver intratumoral TMZ in C57BL6 mice bearing orthotopic gliomas. Immunotherapy consisted of subcutaneous injections of irradiated GL261 or KR158 glioma cells. Tumor size and intratumoral immune cell populations were analyzed by immunohistochemistry.ResultsCombined CED-TMZ and immunotherapy had a synergistic antitumor effect in the GL261 model, compared to CED-TMZ or immunotherapy as monotherapies. In the KR158 model, immunization cured a small proportion of the mice whereas addition of CED-TMZ did not have a synergistic effect. However, CED-TMZ as monotherapy prolonged the median survival. Moreover, TMZ bolus injection in the GL261 model induced neurotoxicity and lower cure rate than its equivalent dose delivered by CED. In addition, we found that T-cells were the predominant cells responsible for the TMZ antitumor effect in the GL261 model. Finally, CED-TMZ combined with immunotherapy significantly reduced tumor volume and increased the intratumoral influx of T-cells in both models.ConclusionsWe show that immunotherapy synergized with CED-TMZ in the GL261 model and cured animals in the KR158 model. Single bolus administration of TMZ was effective with a narrower therapeutic window than CED-TMZ. Combined CED-TMZ and immunotherapy led to an increase in the intratumoral influx of T-cells. These results form part of the basis for the translation of the therapy to patients with GBM but the dosing and timing of delivery will have to be explored in depth both experimentally and clinically.
Highlights
Glioblastomas (GBM) are therapy-resistant tumors with a profoundly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment
We have previously shown that intratumoral TMZ synergized with immunotherapy, e.g. immunizations with Granulocyte macrophage colony stimulation factor (GM-CSF)-transduced GL261 mouse glioma cells (GL-GM), in a T-cell dependent manner [21]
We found that the effect of Convectionenhanced delivery (CED)-TMZ in the GL261 model was completely abrogated in immunocompromised NOD-Scid mice (n = 8), as there was no difference in survival between Convection-enhanced delivery of temozolomide (CED-TMZ) (n = 4) and non-treated (n = 4) NOD-Scid mice (CED-TMZ vs. nontreated p = 0.7740) (Fig. 3b)
Summary
Glioblastomas (GBM) are therapy-resistant tumors with a profoundly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. The objective of this study was to evaluate the therapeutic effect of intratumorally delivered temozolomide in combination with immunotherapy and whether such therapy can generate a cellular antitumor immune response. GBM displays an intrinsic resistance to therapy and is considered a “cold tumor” due to, among other factors, a highly immunosuppressive tumor milieu, defects in tumor antigen presentation, and features of the physical microenvironment such as necrosis and hypoxia [2, 3]. These obstacles underscore the need to develop novel treatments, based on combined treatment strategies. Intratumoral immunosuppression is a decisive factor responsible for the overall poor outcome in patients with GBM [3] and it could impact the potential antitumor effect generated by immunotherapy [5, 6]
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