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OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade

PVSRIPO is a novel viral immunotherapy that has shown evidence of efficacy in a phase I clinical trial for recurrent GBM, resulting in 21% survival rate at 36 months following treatment. To improve clinical response rate, it is critical to resolve the mechanisms of action and therapy resistance in v...

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Autores principales: Yang, Yuanfan, Brown, Michael, Stevenson, Kevin, López, Giselle, Kornahrens, William, Zhang, Gao, Gromeier, Matthias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8255437/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab070.067
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author Yang, Yuanfan
Brown, Michael
Stevenson, Kevin
López, Giselle
Kornahrens, William
Zhang, Gao
Gromeier, Matthias
author_facet Yang, Yuanfan
Brown, Michael
Stevenson, Kevin
López, Giselle
Kornahrens, William
Zhang, Gao
Gromeier, Matthias
author_sort Yang, Yuanfan
collection PubMed
description PVSRIPO is a novel viral immunotherapy that has shown evidence of efficacy in a phase I clinical trial for recurrent GBM, resulting in 21% survival rate at 36 months following treatment. To improve clinical response rate, it is critical to resolve the mechanisms of action and therapy resistance in vivo, thereby designing effective combination therapy strategies. We used immunocompetent mouse models of glioma (CT2A) and metastatic melanoma (B16) to dissect early and late events following virotherapy with PVSRIPO. A blinded systematic review of the pathology from 62 intracranial tumors, collected on different days following PVSRIPO (or control) treatment, was performed. An overall treatment effect, measured by tumor shrinkage, dis-cohesive growth pattern, microglia enrichment, was present in 88% of tumors on day 8, but the tissue response rate fell to 42% on days 10 & 12, and 14% on day 15. The control group showed no treatment effect throughout. RNAseq from the same set of samples showed acute induction of type-I interferon-related inflammation that faded with time in Gene Set Enrichment Analysis. This suggests that sustaining adaptive antitumor immunity elicited by immediate intratumor type-I IFN-dominant inflammation is critical to long term remission. Careful review of the post treatment pathology revealed an early enrichment of both T cells and microglia in the tumor microenvironment with a high Ki-67 proliferation index. We propose that the PVSRIPO therapy effect is dependent on macrophage/microglia mediated cellular immune response, likely in response to direct viral infection. This suggests potential therapeutic interventions, including blockade of the PD1:PD-L1 immune checkpoint, to potentiate antitumor CD8+T cells in response to PVSRIPO therapy. Indeed, combination therapy with αPD-L1 antibody in the CT2A model showed higher long term remission (37%, n=11), compared to either monotherapy; this effect is CD8+T cell- and macrophage-dependent, demonstrated by depletion studies in vivo.
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spelling pubmed-82554372021-07-06 OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade Yang, Yuanfan Brown, Michael Stevenson, Kevin López, Giselle Kornahrens, William Zhang, Gao Gromeier, Matthias Neurooncol Adv Supplement Abstracts PVSRIPO is a novel viral immunotherapy that has shown evidence of efficacy in a phase I clinical trial for recurrent GBM, resulting in 21% survival rate at 36 months following treatment. To improve clinical response rate, it is critical to resolve the mechanisms of action and therapy resistance in vivo, thereby designing effective combination therapy strategies. We used immunocompetent mouse models of glioma (CT2A) and metastatic melanoma (B16) to dissect early and late events following virotherapy with PVSRIPO. A blinded systematic review of the pathology from 62 intracranial tumors, collected on different days following PVSRIPO (or control) treatment, was performed. An overall treatment effect, measured by tumor shrinkage, dis-cohesive growth pattern, microglia enrichment, was present in 88% of tumors on day 8, but the tissue response rate fell to 42% on days 10 & 12, and 14% on day 15. The control group showed no treatment effect throughout. RNAseq from the same set of samples showed acute induction of type-I interferon-related inflammation that faded with time in Gene Set Enrichment Analysis. This suggests that sustaining adaptive antitumor immunity elicited by immediate intratumor type-I IFN-dominant inflammation is critical to long term remission. Careful review of the post treatment pathology revealed an early enrichment of both T cells and microglia in the tumor microenvironment with a high Ki-67 proliferation index. We propose that the PVSRIPO therapy effect is dependent on macrophage/microglia mediated cellular immune response, likely in response to direct viral infection. This suggests potential therapeutic interventions, including blockade of the PD1:PD-L1 immune checkpoint, to potentiate antitumor CD8+T cells in response to PVSRIPO therapy. Indeed, combination therapy with αPD-L1 antibody in the CT2A model showed higher long term remission (37%, n=11), compared to either monotherapy; this effect is CD8+T cell- and macrophage-dependent, demonstrated by depletion studies in vivo. Oxford University Press 2021-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8255437/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab070.067 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press, the Society for Neuro-Oncology and the European Association of Neuro-Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Supplement Abstracts
Yang, Yuanfan
Brown, Michael
Stevenson, Kevin
López, Giselle
Kornahrens, William
Zhang, Gao
Gromeier, Matthias
OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade
title OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade
title_full OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade
title_fullStr OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade
title_full_unstemmed OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade
title_short OTME-16. Polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade
title_sort otme-16. polio virotherapy of murine brain tumors causes microglia/macrophage proliferation and inflammation that is potentiated by immune checkpoint blockade
topic Supplement Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8255437/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab070.067
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