Abstract 150P
Background
Immunotherapy represents a promising research area for triple negative breast cancers (TNBCs), a breast cancer subtype defined by lack of estrogen and progesterone receptors, and HER2 overexpression. Current treatment is often limited to chemotherapy which is toxic and short lived with imminent metastatic recurrence. TNBCs are more immunogenic, often characterized by high number of tumors infiltrating lymphocytes, a feature which can be harnessed to increase responsiveness to immunotherapy. Immune cells are known to express pathogen recognition receptors such as toll-like receptors (TLRs) and their engagement activates downstream pathways to elicit specific T cell antitumor immunity.
Methods
To utilize immune modulation strategy for TNBC treatment, the study evaluated the combined efficacy of Paclitaxel with intratumoral administration of TLR7/8 (Resiquimod) or TLR9 (CPG-ODN-2395) agonists in syngeneic TNBC mouse model. Tumor volume was measured, and percentages of tumor immune cell infiltrates were determined by flow cytometry at endpoint. Gene expression studies were also carried out on excised tumors using qPCR.
Results
Showed chemotherapy with Resiquimod or CPG-ODN 2395 promoted significant tumor regression compared to chemotherapy alone. Also, Paclitaxel/Resiquimod treatment significantly increased influx of B-cells, pDCs, helper and cytotoxic T-cells, and reduced regulatory T-cells tumor infiltrates compared to Paclitaxel/CPG-ODN 2395 and chemotherapy alone. Furthermore, Paclitaxel/Resiquimod treatment significantly upregulated gene expression of chemokines attracting cytotoxic T lymphocytes, type-1 helper, and NK cells as well as increased gene expression of IFN-γ, perforin, and granzyme B. Vimentin and Claudin 5, genes associated with epithelial mesenchymal transition and metastasis respectively were downregulated following Paclitaxel/Resiquimod treatment.
Conclusions
Overall, findings suggest that combination therapy of TLR7/8 agonist (Resiquimod) with Paclitaxel, promotes antitumor immunity and may represent a more effective treatment approach for TNBC.
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Croucher innovative award.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1P - Integrated Data Analysis within IMMUcan Identifies Prognostic Features of Early NSCLC
Presenter: Daniel Schulz
Session: Poster Display
3P - Exploratory efficacy analysis by smoking status in PD-L1 high patients in the phase III, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) IMpower110 study
Presenter: Luis Paz-Ares
Session: Poster Display
4P - Immune exoproteome, soluble proteome and immune-related gene expression profiles of anti-PD-1 therapy in stage IIIB/IV Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: relevance of immunosuppressive factors
Presenter: Paulo Santos
Session: Poster Display
5P - Blood immune-inflammatory dynamic unveils distinctive irAE features in ICI treated NSCLC
Presenter: Giulia Mazzaschi
Session: Poster Display
6P - CD161+CD127+CD8+ T cells as a critical predictor of the efficacy of anti-PD-1 immunotherapy in diabetic patients with non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Jingjing Qu
Session: Poster Display
7P - A T-cell-derived circulating DNA as a biomarker for response to anti-PD(L)1 immunotherapy in advanced stage non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Nuthchaya Mejun
Session: Poster Display
9P - Primary NSCLC patient-derived microtumors (PMTs) for clinical-relvant prediction of immunotherapy efficacy
Presenter: Fabienne Nocera
Session: Poster Display
11P - Decreased monocyte-to-lymphocyte ratio was associated with satisfied outcomes of first-line PD-1 inhibitors plus chemotherapy in stage IIIB-IV non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Liang Zheng
Session: Poster Display
12P - Spatially preserved multi-region transcriptomic subtyping and biomarkers associated with long-term benefit with chemoimmunotherapy in extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC)
Presenter: Melina Peressini Álvarez
Session: Poster Display