Abstract
Surgical resection of cancer remains the frontline therapy for millions of patients annually, but post-operative recurrence is common, with a relapse rate of around 45% for non-small cell lung cancer. The tumour draining lymph nodes (dLN) are resected at the time of surgery for staging purposes, and this cannot be a null event for patient survival and future response to immune checkpoint blockade treatment. This project investigates cancer surgery, lymphadenectomy, onset of metastatic disease, and response to immunotherapy in a novel model that closely reflects the clinical setting. In a murine metastatic lung cancer model, primary subcutaneous tumours were resected with associated dLNs remaining intact, completely resected or partially resected. Median survival after surgery was significantly shorter with complete dLN resection at the time of surgery (49 days (95%CI)) compared to when lymph nodes remained intact (> 88 days; p < 0.05). Survival was partially restored with incomplete lymph node resection and CD8 T cell dependent. Treatment with aCTLA4 whilst effective against the primary tumour was ineffective for metastatic lung disease. Conversely, aPD-1/aCD40 treatment was effective in both the primary and metastatic disease settings and restored the detrimental effects of complete dLN resection on survival. In this pre-clinical lung metastatic disease model that closely reflects the clinical setting, we observe decreased frequency of survival after complete lymphadenectomy, which was ameliorated with partial lymph node removal or with early administration of aPD-1/aCD40 therapy. These findings have direct relevance to surgical lymph node resection and adjuvant immunotherapy in lung cancer, and perhaps other cancer, patients.
Highlights
Surgical resection of cancer remains the frontline therapy for some 12 million cancer patients every year [1]
In the clinical setting metastatic disease develops after treatment of the primary tumour, and the immune system is no longer naïve to the tumour cells
We developed a new model for metastatic disease that more closely reflects the clinical setting of tumour resection and later onset of metastatic disease
Summary
Surgical resection of cancer remains the frontline therapy for some 12 million cancer patients every year [1]. Surgery alone is unlikely to be curative due to the presence of metastases, or tumour microdeposits, that remain undetected at the time of surgery [2], forming a rationale for adjuvant systemic therapies. Even these treatments have a low cure rate for most solid malignancies that have metastasised. An exception is proving to be melanoma [3], where adjuvant immunotherapy even in the face of metastatic disease can lead to apparent cure. Immunotherapy administered after surgery could stimulate the anti-tumour immune response and control small persisting tumour deposits that lead to disease recurrence.
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