Investigator

John Prior

University Of Lausanne

JPJohn Prior
Papers(1)
Low-Dose Radiotherapy…
Collaborators(10)
Lana KandalaftMaria Ochoa de OlzaMarius MessemakerMartina ImbimboMassimo AndreattaMelita IrvingSantiago J. CarmonaSylvie RusakiewiczUrania DafniCatherine Ronet
Institutions(3)
University Of LausanneMassachusetts General…National And Kapodist…

Papers

Low-Dose Radiotherapy Reverses Tumor Immune Desertification and Resistance to Immunotherapy

Abstract Developing strategies to inflame tumors is critical for increasing response to immunotherapy. Here, we report that low-dose radiotherapy (LDRT) of murine tumors promotes T-cell infiltration and enables responsiveness to combinatorial immunotherapy in an IFN-dependent manner. Treatment efficacy relied upon mobilizing both adaptive and innate immunity and depended on both cytotoxic CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. LDRT elicited predominantly CD4+ cells with features of exhausted effector cytotoxic cells, with a subset expressing NKG2D and exhibiting proliferative capacity, as well as a unique subset of activated dendritic cells expressing the NKG2D ligand RAE1. We translated these findings to a phase I clinical trial administering LDRT, low-dose cyclophosphamide, and immune checkpoint blockade to patients with immune-desert tumors. In responsive patients, the combinatorial treatment triggered T-cell infiltration, predominantly of CD4+ cells with Th1 signatures. Our data support the rational combination of LDRT with immunotherapy for effectively treating low T cell–infiltrated tumors. Significance: Low-dose radiation reprogrammed the tumor microenvironment of tumors with scarce immune infiltration and together with immunotherapy induced simultaneous mobilization of innate and adaptive immunity, predominantly CD4+ effector T cells, to achieve tumor control dependent on NKG2D. The combination induced important responses in patients with metastatic immune-cold tumors. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1

1Papers
16Collaborators