Low-dose metronomic cyclophosphamide complements the actions of an intratumoral C-class CpG TLR9 agonist to potentiate innate immunity and drive potent T cell-mediated anti-tumor responses

On January 31, 2020 Oncotarget reported Intratumoral injection of SD-101 induces significant anti-tumor immunity in preclinical and clinical studies, especially when combined with PD-1 blockade (Press release, Oncotarget, JAN 31, 2020, View Source [SID1234553748]).

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Combination therapy generated CD8+ T cell dependent immunity leading to rejection of both non-injected and injected tumors and long-term survival, even in very large tumors.

Dr. Mary J. Janatpour from Dynavax Technologies, Inc., Emeryville, CA 94608,USA said, "It has long been appreciated by cancer researchers that the phenotypic heterogeneity and progressive evolution of malignant tumors minimizes the chance that any agent targeting a single molecular pathway could effectively cure advanced cancer."

The authors have previously demonstrated in mouse tumor models that employing the innate immune system to prime a T cell response, in combination with checkpoint blockade, results in deep and durable anti-tumor efficacy.

These high response rates were observed in both injected and non-injected tumor lesions and patients with PD-L1 negative tumors, indicating low levels of basal immune inflammation, responded as well as patients with PD-L1 positive tumors.

Intratumorally administered SD-101 exerts its priming activity and ultimate orchestration of a systemic anti-tumor T cell response through multiple mechanisms.

The production of interferon stimulates tumor cell killing by natural killer cells, with ensuing tumor antigen release, and induces chemokines that attract T cells back to the tumor bed.

Low-dose cyclophosphamide decreases Tregs. Additional impacted biological activities have been described, such as:

increased interferon production,
induction of immunogenic cell death,
increases in effector T cells, and
increases in functional NK cells,
…likely to be complementary to SD-101 activity by virtue of modulation of the TME. By administering SD-101 locally, rather than systemically, the researchers demonstrate that localized SD-101 injection combined with systemically administered low-dose cyclophosphamide confers an anti-tumor response at non-injected sites.

The Janatpour research Team concluded that, taken together, the intratumoral SD-101 plus low-dose CY combination may complement existing checkpoint blockade therapies in patients to improve efficacy in the clinic and extend the benefits of immunotherapy to more patients.