Abstract

Poxvirus-based active immunotherapies mediate anti-tumor efficacy by triggering broad and durable Th1 dominated T cell responses against the tumor. While monotherapy significantly delays tumor growth, it often does not lead to complete tumor regression. It was hypothesized that the induced robust infiltration of IFNγ-producing T cells into the tumor could provoke an adaptive immune evasive response by the tumor through the upregulation of PD-L1 expression. In therapeutic CT26-HER-2 tumor models, MVA-BN-HER2 poxvirus immunotherapy resulted in significant tumor growth delay accompanied by a robust, tumor-infiltrating T cell response that was characterized by low to mid-levels of PD-1 expression on T cells. As hypothesized, this response was countered by significantly increased PD-L1 expression on the tumor and, unexpectedly, also on infiltrating T cells. Synergistic benefit of anti-tumor therapy was observed when MVA-BN-HER2 immunotherapy was combined with PD-1 immune checkpoint blockade. Interestingly, PD-1 blockade stimulated a second immune checkpoint molecule, LAG-3, to be expressed on T cells. Combining MVA-BN-HER2 immunotherapy with dual PD-1 plus LAG-3 blockade resulted in comprehensive tumor regression in all mice treated with the triple combination therapy. Subsequent rejection of tumors lacking the HER-2 antigen by treatment-responsive mice without further therapy six months after the original challenge demonstrated long lasting memory and suggested that effective T cell immunity to novel, non-targeted tumor antigens (antigen spread) had occurred. These data support the clinical investigation of this triple therapy regimen, especially in cancer patients harboring PD-L1neg/low tumors unlikely to benefit from immune checkpoint blockade alone.

Highlights

  • Poxvirus-based active immunotherapies are in development to treat a variety of cancers

  • We investigated whether poxvirus-based active immunotherapies would increase PD-L1 expression in the tumor microenvironments of transplantable solid tumor or experimental lung metastasis mouse models

  • Poxvirus-based active immunotherapy results in significant antitumor immunity characterized by robust CD8 T cell infiltration of the tumor [3,5,37,38]

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Summary

Introduction

Poxvirus-based active immunotherapies are in development to treat a variety of cancers. Nonclinical and clinical studies have demonstrated that these poxvirus-based active immunotherapies generate robust antigen-specific immune responses. Effector T cells simultaneously express multiple inhibitory immune checkpoint molecules such as cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4), programmed death receptor-1 (PD-1), lymphocyte activation gene-3 (LAG-3), and others to control the immune response [6]. While these mechanisms are important to restrict auto-immunity, they can hinder the development, persistence, and function of desired anti-cancer immunity. Monotherapy with immune checkpoint blockade has yielded remarkable rapid and durable clinical benefit for some cancer patients, ushering a new era of immuno-oncology for cancer treatment

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