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Article Dans Une Revue Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy Année : 2020

Immune checkpoint inhibitors reverse tolerogenic mechanisms induced by melanoma targeted radionuclide therapy

Résumé

In line with the ongoing phase I trial (NCT03784625) dedicated to melanoma targeted radionuclide therapy (TRT), we explore the interplay between immune system and the melanin ligand [131I]ICF01012 alone or combined with immunotherapy (immune checkpoint inhibitors, ICI) in preclinical models. Here we demonstrate that [131I]ICF01012 induces immunogenic cell death, characterized by a significant increase in cell surface-exposed annexin A1 and calreticulin. Additionally, [131I]ICF01012 increases survival in immunocompetent mice, compared to immunocompromised (29 vs. 24 days, p = 0.0374). Flow cytometry and RT-qPCR analyses highlight that [131I]ICF01012 induces adaptive and innate immune cell recruitment in the tumor microenvironment. [131I]ICF01012 combination with ICIs (anti-CTLA-4, anti-PD-1, anti-PD-L1) has shown that tolerance is a main immune escape mechanism, whereas exhaustion is not present after TRT. Furthermore, [131I]ICF01012 and ICI combination has systematically resulted in a prolonged survival (p < 0.0001) compared to TRT alone. Specifically, [131I]ICF01012 + anti-CTLA-4 combination significantly increases survival compared to anti-CTLA-4 alone (41 vs. 26 days; p = 0.0011), without toxicity. This work represents the first global characterization of TRT-induced modifications of the antitumor immune response, demonstrating that tolerance is a main immune escape mechanism and that combining TRT and ICI is promising.
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Dates et versions

hal-02882113 , version 1 (26-06-2020)

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Jacques Rouanet, Valentin Benboubker, Hussein Akil, Ana Hennino, Philippe Auzeloux, et al.. Immune checkpoint inhibitors reverse tolerogenic mechanisms induced by melanoma targeted radionuclide therapy. Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy, 2020, ⟨10.1007/s00262-020-02606-8⟩. ⟨hal-02882113⟩
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