Abstract
PurposeTreatments for metastatic human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive tumors are improving but remain inadequate. We investigated activating antitumor immune response by combining radiation therapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors using mouse tumors overexpressing HER2, a pivotal driver oncogenic antigen, to develop new immunotherapies for metastatic HER2-positive tumors.Materials and methodsNT2.5 cells were inoculated into the two mammary fat pads of FVB/N mice, which were divided into four groups: no treatment (Non), anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA4 antibodies (P1C4), irradiation of the large tumor (Rad), and combination (R + P1C4) groups. Tumor growth, immunostaining of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, and the proportion of HER2-tumor antigen-specific CD8-positive T cells in the spleen and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes were analyzed.ResultsIn the Rad group, unirradiated and irradiated tumors shrank after treatment. Besides the directly irradiated tumors, the unirradiated tumors in the R + P1C4 group shrank the most. In the unirradiated tumors, CD8-positive T cells and FOXP3-positive T cells accumulated significantly more in the R + P1C4 group than in the P1C4 and the Rad groups (all p < 0.001). CD4-positive helper T cells accumulated significantly more in the R + P1C4 group than in the Rad group (p < 0.05), but this was not significantly different from the P1C4 group. HER2-specific CD8-positive T cells in the spleen and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes were significantly increased in the R + P1C4 group compared to the P1C4 and Rad groups (all p < 0.0001).ConclusionIrradiation of HER2-positive tumors induced an antitumor immune effect against the unirradiated tumor, which was enhanced by the combined use of immune checkpoint inhibitors and was mediated by enhanced recruitment of HER2-tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes at the tumor site in an HER2-positive mouse tumor model. Harnessing the distant antitumor immune response induced by the combination of radiation therapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors could be a promising treatment strategy for metastatic HER2-positive tumors.
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