Abstract

The development of immunotherapies has revolutionized intervention strategies for a variety of primary cancers. Despite this promising progress, treatment options for primary brain cancer and brain metastasis remain limited and still largely depend on surgical resection, radio- and/or chemotherapy. The paucity in the successful development of immunotherapies for brain cancers can in part be attributed to the traditional view of the brain as an immunologically privileged site. The presence of the blood-brain barrier and the absence of lymphatic drainage were believed to restrict the entry of blood-borne immune and inflammatory cells into the central nervous system (CNS), leading to an exclusion of the brain from systemic immune surveillance. However, recent insight from pre-clinical and clinical studies on the immune landscape of brain cancers challenged this dogma. Recruitment of blood-borne immune cells into the CNS provides unprecedented opportunities for the development of tumor microenvironment (TME)-targeted or immunotherapies against primary and metastatic cancers. Moreover, it is increasingly recognized that in addition to genotoxic effects, ionizing radiation represents a critical modulator of tumor-associated inflammation and synergizes with immunotherapies in adjuvant settings. This review summarizes current knowledge on the cellular and molecular identity of tumor-associated immune cells in primary and metastatic brain cancers and discusses underlying mechanisms by which ionizing radiation modulates the immune response. Detailed mechanistic insight into the effects of radiation on the unique immune landscape of brain cancers is essential for the development of multimodality intervention strategies in which immune-modulatory effects of radiotherapy are exploited to sensitize brain cancers to immunotherapies by converting immunologically “cold” into “hot” environments.

Highlights

  • Primary and metastatic brain tumors represent a challenging clinical issue

  • The results suggest that the optimal schedule is tumor type and immunotherapy dependent

  • A study of patients with melanoma brain metastasis showed that concurrent immunotherapy with anti-PD-L1 and anti-cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4) showed improved response rates if immunotherapy was given within a time frame of 4 weeks after radiation compared to treatments that were more than 4 weeks apart [122]

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Summary

Lisa Sevenich*

The development of immunotherapies has revolutionized intervention strategies for a variety of primary cancers. Recruitment of blood-borne immune cells into the CNS provides unprecedented opportunities for the development of tumor microenvironment (TME)-targeted or immunotherapies against primary and metastatic cancers. This review summarizes current knowledge on the cellular and molecular identity of tumor-associated immune cells in primary and metastatic brain cancers and discusses underlying mechanisms by which ionizing radiation modulates the immune response. Detailed mechanistic insight into the effects of radiation on the unique immune landscape of brain cancers is essential for the development of multimodality intervention strategies in which immune-modulatory effects of radiotherapy are exploited to sensitize brain cancers to immunotherapies by converting immunologically “cold” into “hot” environments

INTRODUCTION
IMMUNE SURVEILLANCE IN THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
Standard of Care
MOLECULAR BASIS OF IMMUNE MODULATORY EFFECTS OF IR
Radiation Increases Recognition of Tumor Antigens by the Immune System
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Full Text
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