Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Abstract Background Despite the significant progress achieved with PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors in the treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC), most patients ultimately progress. Targeted radiotheranostics offer a new potential approach. Although a radiotheranostic platform targeting the prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) has been tested in mRCC in patients preliminarily, thorough preclinical optimization has not been reported. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is overexpressed in tumor-associated neovascular endothelial cells of many solid tumors, including metastatic RCC. Furthermore, radiopharmaceutical therapy using β- and α-particle emitting agents causes immunomodulation by inducing immunogenic cell death, and release of tumor-associated antigens, potentially enhancing inflammatory phenotype. Here, we investigated whether PSMA-based radiotheranostics can be utilized to improve the efficacy of PD-1 therapy. Methods The PSMA+ RENCA model was developed by lentiviral transduction of RENCA (wt) cells and then characterized for basal and IFN-g induced PD-L1 expression. 68Ga-L1 and 225Ac-L1 were synthesized in high radiochemical yield and purity following our reported methods. Male and female BALB/c mice were used for tumor inoculation. 68Ga-L1 was evaluated in small animal PET/CT imaging in flank and PET/MR imaging in orthotopic implantation. A treatment study was conducted to assess the effect of combination therapy in seven groups in the flank tumors at 2 weeks post-inoculation: Control (saline); PD-1 (10 mg/kg); Anti-PD-1 (10 mg/kg)+axitinib (tyrosine kinase inhibitor, 5 mg/kg, oral gavage, for five days/wk); 225Ac-L1 (37 kBq); 225Ac-L1 (2×37 kBq, 1 wk apart); 225Ac-L1 (37 kBq)+PD-1 (10 mg/kg) and [225Ac-L1 2×37 kBq)+PD-1 (10 mg/kg). Therapeutic efficacy was assessed by tumor weight and time to progression of tumor volume doubling (TVD). To determine the mechanism of action of the 225Ac-L1/anti-PD-1 combination treatment, tumor-infiltrating lymphoid populations from tumor samples were collected at day 30, and Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting analysis was done with fluorochrome-labeled antibodies against CD45, CD3, CD8, IL10, and IL12. Results 68Ga-L1 and 225Ac-L1 confirmed 10-fold and 2-fold higher uptake, respectively, in the PSMA+ RENCA cells compared to RENCA (wt) cells. PET imaging in the flank model displayed ~7-fold higher accumulation of 68Ga-L1 in PSMA+ RENCA than the RENCA (wt). Two-fold higher accumulation of 68Ga-L1 was observed in orthotopic tumors than the normal kidneys during 1-3 h post-injection. Significant lung metastases were detected with 68Ga-L1 PET at 3 weeks in mice with orthotopic tumors. A combination therapy study was conducted using anti-PD-1 and anti-PD-1+axitinib and compared the efficacy with 225Ac-L1 as a single agent (37 kBq and 2×37 kBq, 1 wk apart) and in combination with PD-1. Median TVD increased from 12 d (control) to 16 d (anti-PD-1), 16 d (anti-PD-1+axitinib), 24 d 225Ac-L1 (37 kBq) P0.001, 24 d 225Ac-L1 (2 × 37 kBq) P0.0001}, 30 d [anti-PD-1+225Ac-L1 (1×37 kBq) P0.0001, and undefined, anti-PD-1+225Ac-L1 2×37 kBq), P0.0001, respectively. Furthermore, treatment with 225Ac-L1 (2×37 kBq, 1 wk) resulted in a significant lowering of tumor growth (P 0.01) compared to control, whereas anti-PD-1 (vs. control) alone moderately reduced tumor growth. The combination of the treatment of PD-1+225Ac-L1 (2×37 kBq), P=0.0001 was the most effective in enhancing tumor growth inhibition compared with the PD-1+axitinib group. Flow cytometry of tumor-infiltrating immune cells of the treatment groups PD-1+225Ac-L1(37 kBq) and PD-1+225Ac-L1 (2×37 kBq) revealed a higher proportion of effector CD3+CD8+ T cells, accompanied by a significant decline in the proportion of immunosuppressive and pro-tumoral CD8+IL10+ T cells and increase in antitumor CD8+IL12+ T cells compared to untreated and treatment control groups (PD-1 or PD-1+axitinib groups). Conclusions Combining radiotheranostic platform, 68Ga-L1/225Ac-L1 with PD-1 therapy reduces tumor burden and improves TVD in a syngeic model of RCC. This is a promising option for metastatic RCC patients with low and heterogeneous PSMA expression. Translation of this method will be pursued actively. DOD CDMRP Funding: yes
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Anand K Thotakura
Rajan Singh
Suresh Alati
The Oncologist
Johns Hopkins University
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Thotakura et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e5d782b6db64358756d477 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/oncolo/oyae181.054
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: