Abstract

Abstract Infiltration of tumor by T cells is a prerequisite for successful immunotherapy of solid tumors. In this study, we investigate the influence of tumor-targeted radiation on chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy tumor infiltration, accumulation, and efficacy in clinically relevant models of pleural mesothelioma and non–small cell lung cancers. We use a nonablative dose of tumor-targeted radiation prior to systemic administration of mesothelin-targeted CAR T cells to assess infiltration, proliferation, antitumor efficacy, and functional persistence of CAR T cells at primary and distant sites of tumor. A tumor-targeted, nonablative dose of radiation promotes early and high infiltration, proliferation, and functional persistence of CAR T cells. Tumor-targeted radiation promotes tumor-chemokine expression and chemokine-receptor expression in infiltrating T cells and results in a subpopulation of higher-intensity CAR-expressing T cells with high coexpression of chemokine receptors that further infiltrate distant sites of disease, enhancing CAR T-cell antitumor efficacy. Enhanced CAR T-cell efficacy is evident in models of both high-mesothelin-expressing mesothelioma and mixed-mesothelin-expressing lung cancer—two thoracic cancers for which radiotherapy is part of the standard of care. Our results strongly suggest that the use of tumor-targeted radiation prior to systemic administration of CAR T cells may substantially improve CAR T-cell therapy efficacy for solid tumors. Building on our observations, we describe a translational strategy of “sandwich” cell therapy for solid tumors that combines sequential metastatic site–targeted radiation and CAR T cells—a regional solution to overcome barriers to systemic delivery of CAR T cells.

Keywords:
Radiation therapy Medicine Immunotherapy Solid tumor Cancer research Cancer Internal medicine

Metrics

19
Cited By
4.51
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
55
Refs
0.95
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

CAR-T cell therapy research
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Oncology
Virus-based gene therapy research
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Genetics
Nanowire Synthesis and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering

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JOURNAL ARTICLE

CAR-T Cell Therapy in Solid Tumor

Mingzheng Lyu

Journal:   Highlights in Science Engineering and Technology Year: 2023 Vol: 74 Pages: 1421-1425
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