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44,257
result(s) for
"Tumour Microenvironment"
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Radiotherapy, immunity, and immune checkpoint inhibitors
by
Lynch, Connor
,
Weichselbaum, Ralph R
,
Pitroda, Sean P
in
Adenosine
,
Animals
,
Antigen presentation
2024
Radiotherapy exerts immunostimulatory and immunosuppressive effects, both locally, within the irradiated tumour microenvironment, and systemically, outside the radiation field. Inspired by preclinical data that showed synergy between radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors, multiple clinical trials were initiated with the hypothesis that combined treatment with radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors could stimulate a robust systemic immune response and improve clinical outcomes. However, despite early optimism, radioimmunotherapy trials in the curative and metastatic settings have met with little success. In this Review, we summarise the immunostimulatory effects of radiotherapy that provided the theoretical basis for trials of combination radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors. We also discuss findings from clinical trials incorporating radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors and examine the success of these trials in the context of the immunosuppressive effects of radiotherapy. We conclude by highlighting targets for relieving radiotherapy-induced immunosuppression with the goal of enhancing the combined effects of radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Journal Article
Spatial transcriptomics reveals substantial heterogeneity in triple-negative breast cancer with potential clinical implications
2024
While triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is known to be heterogeneous at the genomic and transcriptomic levels, spatial information on tumor organization and cell composition is still lacking. Here, we investigate TNBC tumor architecture including its microenvironment using spatial transcriptomics on a series of 92 patients. We perform an in-depth characterization of tumor and stroma organization and composition using an integrative approach combining histomorphological and spatial transcriptomics. Furthermore, a detailed molecular characterization of tertiary lymphoid structures leads to identify a gene signature strongly associated to disease outcome and response to immunotherapy in several tumor types beyond TNBC. A stepwise clustering analysis identifies nine TNBC spatial archetypes, further validated in external datasets. Several spatial archetypes are associated with disease outcome and characterized by potentially actionable features. In this work, we provide a comprehensive insight into the complexity of TNBC ecosystem with potential clinical relevance, opening avenues for treatment tailoring including immunotherapy.
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a heterogenous disease with several molecular subtypes previously described. Here the authors perform a spatial transcriptomics analysis on a series of 92 patients, providing additional insights into the heterogeneity of TNBC, with implications for clinical outcomes and therapy.
Journal Article
New Insights into Mechanisms of Cisplatin Resistance: From Tumor Cell to Microenvironment
by
Chen, Shang-Hung
,
Chang, Jang-Yang
in
Animals
,
Antineoplastic Agents - pharmacology
,
Biomarkers, Tumor
2019
Although cisplatin has been a pivotal chemotherapy drug in treating patients with various types of cancer for decades, drug resistance has been a major clinical impediment. In general, cisplatin exerts cytotoxic effects in tumor cells mainly through the generation of DNA-platinum adducts and subsequent DNA damage response. Accordingly, considerable effort has been devoted to clarify the resistance mechanisms inside tumor cells, such as decreased drug accumulation, enhanced detoxification activity, promotion of DNA repair capacity, and inactivated cell death signaling. However, recent advances in high-throughput techniques, cell culture platforms, animal models, and analytic methods have also demonstrated that the tumor microenvironment plays a key role in the development of cisplatin resistance. Recent clinical successes in combination treatments with cisplatin and novel agents targeting components in the tumor microenvironment, such as angiogenesis and immune cells, have also supported the therapeutic value of these components in cisplatin resistance. In this review, we summarize resistance mechanisms with respect to a single tumor cell and crucial components in the tumor microenvironment, particularly focusing on favorable results from clinical studies. By compiling emerging evidence from preclinical and clinical studies, this review may provide insights into the development of a novel approach to overcome cisplatin resistance.
Journal Article
Molecular Repolarisation of Tumour-Associated Macrophages
by
Fennemann, Felix L.
,
Verdoes, Martijn
,
Ilina, Olga
in
Angiogenesis
,
Animals
,
cancer immunotherapy
2018
The tumour microenvironment (TME) is composed of extracellular matrix and non-mutated cells supporting tumour growth and development. Tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) are among the most abundant immune cells in the TME and are responsible for the onset of a smouldering inflammation. TAMs play a pivotal role in oncogenic processes as tumour proliferation, angiogenesis and metastasis, and they provide a barrier against the cytotoxic effector function of T lymphocytes and natural killer (NK) cells. However, TAMs are highly plastic cells that can adopt either pro- or anti-inflammatory roles in response to environmental cues. Consequently, TAMs represent an attractive target to recalibrate immune responses in the TME. Initial TAM-targeted strategies, such as macrophage depletion or disruption of TAM recruitment, have shown beneficial effects in preclinical models and clinical trials. Alternatively, reprogramming TAMs towards a proinflammatory and tumouricidal phenotype has become an attractive strategy in immunotherapy. This work summarises the molecular wheelwork of macrophage biology and presents an overview of molecular strategies to repolarise TAMs in immunotherapy.
Journal Article
Crosstalk between cancer-associated fibroblasts and immune cells in the tumor microenvironment: new findings and future perspectives
2021
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), a stromal cell population with cell-of-origin, phenotypic and functional heterogeneity, are the most essential components of the tumor microenvironment (TME). Through multiple pathways, activated CAFs can promote tumor growth, angiogenesis, invasion and metastasis, along with extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling and even chemoresistance. Numerous previous studies have confirmed the critical role of the interaction between CAFs and tumor cells in tumorigenesis and development. However, recently, the mutual effects of CAFs and the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) have been identified as another key factor in promoting tumor progression. The TIME mainly consists of distinct immune cell populations in tumor islets and is highly associated with the antitumor immunological state in the TME. CAFs interact with tumor-infiltrating immune cells as well as other immune components within the TIME via the secretion of various cytokines, growth factors, chemokines, exosomes and other effector molecules, consequently shaping an immunosuppressive TME that enables cancer cells to evade surveillance of the immune system. In-depth studies of CAFs and immune microenvironment interactions, particularly the complicated mechanisms connecting CAFs with immune cells, might provide novel strategies for subsequent targeted immunotherapies. Herein, we shed light on recent advances regarding the direct and indirect crosstalk between CAFs and infiltrating immune cells and further summarize the possible immunoinhibitory mechanisms induced by CAFs in the TME. In addition, we present current related CAF-targeting immunotherapies and briefly describe some future perspectives on CAF research in the end.
Journal Article
Crosstalk Between the MSI Status and Tumor Microenvironment in Colorectal Cancer
2020
Colorectal cancer (CRC) patients, especially those with deficient mismatch repair (dMMR)/microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) tumors, whose sensitivity to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) is significantly higher than that of patients with microsatellite-stable (MSS)/microsatellite instability-low (MSI-L) tumors, have derived clinical benefits from immunotherapy. Most studies have not systematically evaluated the immune characteristics and immune microenvironments of MSI-H and MSS/MSI-L CRCs. We analyzed the relationship between the MSI status and prognosis of ICI treatment in an immunotherapy cohort. We further used mutation data for the immunotherapy and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA)-CRC [colon adenocarcinoma (COAD) + rectum adenocarcinoma (READ)] cohorts. For mRNA expression, mutation data analysis of the immune microenvironment and immunogenicity under different MSI statuses was performed. Compared with CRC patients with MSS/MSI-L tumors, those with MSI-H tumors significantly benefited from ICI treatment. MSI-H CRC had more immune cell infiltration, higher expression of immune-related genes, and higher immunogenicity than MSS/MSI-L CRC. The MANTIS score, which is used to predict the MSI status, was positively correlated with immune cells, immune-related genes, and immunogenicity. In addition, subtype analysis showed that COAD and READ might have different immune microenvironments. MSI-H CRC may have an inflammatory tumor microenvironment and increased sensitivity to ICIs. Unlike those of MSI-H READ, the immune characteristics of MSI-H COAD may be consistent with those of MSI-H CRC.
Journal Article
Current advances and outlooks in immunotherapy for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
2020
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is an incurable cancer resistant to traditional treatments, although a limited number of early-stage patients can undergo radical resection. Immunotherapies for the treatment of haematological malignancies as well as solid tumours have been substantially improved over the past decades, and impressive results have been obtained in recent preclinical and clinical trials. However, PDAC is likely the exception because of its unique tumour microenvironment (TME). In this review, we summarize the characteristics of the PDAC TME and focus on the network of various tumour-infiltrating immune cells, outlining the current advances in PDAC immunotherapy and addressing the effect of the PDAC TME on immunotherapy. This review further explores the combinations of different therapies used to enhance antitumour efficacy or reverse immunodeficiencies and describes optimizable immunotherapeutic strategies for PDAC. The concordant combination of various treatments, such as targeting cancer cells and the stroma, reversing suppressive immune reactions and enhancing antitumour reactivity, may be the most promising approach for the treatment of PDAC. Traditional treatments, especially chemotherapy, may also be optimized for individual patients to remodel the immunosuppressive microenvironment for enhanced therapy.
Journal Article
The tumour microenvironment in pancreatic cancer — clinical challenges and opportunities
by
Zheng, Lei
,
Jaffee, Elizabeth M
,
Ho Won Jin
in
Adenocarcinoma
,
Chemotherapy
,
Clinical outcomes
2020
Metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the most lethal solid tumours despite the use of multi-agent conventional chemotherapy regimens. Such poor outcomes have fuelled ongoing efforts to exploit the tumour microenvironment (TME) for therapy, but strategies aimed at deconstructing the surrounding desmoplastic stroma and targeting the immunosuppressive pathways have largely failed. In fact, evidence has now shown that the stroma is multi-faceted, which illustrates the complexity of exploring features of the TME as isolated targets. In this Review, we describe ways in which the PDAC microenvironment has been targeted and note the current understanding of the clinical outcomes that have unexpectedly contradicted preclinical observations. We also consider the more sophisticated therapeutic strategies under active investigation — multi-modal treatment approaches and exploitation of biologically integrated targets — which aim to remodel the TME against PDAC.Important research efforts are being made to develop therapeutic strategies targeting the tumour microenvironment in pancreatic adenocarcinoma. The authors of this Review describe the apparent contradiction between preclinical studies and clinical outcomes observed to date, presenting more sophisticated strategies under active investigation.
Journal Article
Molecular Heterogeneity and Immunosuppressive Microenvironment in Glioblastoma
by
DeCordova, Syreeta
,
Klein, Lukas
,
Kishore, Uday
in
astrocytes
,
Brain cancer
,
Brain Neoplasms - genetics
2020
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most aggressive primary brain tumor in adults, with a poor prognosis, despite surgical resection combined with radio- and chemotherapy. The major clinical obstacles contributing to poor GBM prognosis are late diagnosis, diffuse infiltration, pseudo-palisading necrosis, microvascular proliferation, and resistance to conventional therapy. These challenges are further compounded by extensive inter- and intra-tumor heterogeneity and the dynamic plasticity of GBM cells. The complex heterogeneous nature of GBM cells is facilitated by the local inflammatory tumor microenvironment, which mostly induces tumor aggressiveness and drug resistance. An immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment of GBM provides multiple pathways for tumor immune evasion. Infiltrating immune cells, mostly tumor-associated macrophages, comprise much of the non-neoplastic population in GBM. Further understanding of the immune microenvironment of GBM is essential to make advances in the development of immunotherapeutics. Recently, whole-genome sequencing, epigenomics and transcriptional profiling have significantly helped improve the prognostic and therapeutic outcomes of GBM patients. Here, we discuss recent genomic advances, the role of innate and adaptive immune mechanisms, and the presence of an established immunosuppressive GBM microenvironment that suppresses and/or prevents the anti-tumor host response.
Journal Article
Therapeutic targeting of the hypoxic tumour microenvironment
by
Wilson, William R
,
Macann, Andrew
,
Singleton, Dean C
in
Hypoxia
,
Microenvironments
,
Microvasculature
2021
Hypoxia is prevalent in human tumours and contributes to microenvironments that shape cancer evolution and adversely affect therapeutic outcomes. Historically, two different tumour microenvironment (TME) research communities have been discernible. One has focused on physicochemical gradients of oxygen, pH and nutrients in the tumour interstitium, motivated in part by the barrier that hypoxia poses to effective radiotherapy. The other has focused on cellular interactions involving tumour and non-tumour cells within the TME. Over the past decade, strong links have been established between these two themes, providing new insights into fundamental aspects of tumour biology and presenting new strategies for addressing the effects of hypoxia and other microenvironmental features that arise from the inefficient microvascular system in solid tumours. This Review provides a perspective on advances at the interface between these two aspects of the TME, with a focus on translational therapeutic opportunities relating to the elimination and/or exploitation of tumour hypoxia.Hypoxia is a common feature of tumours, contributes to many of the hallmarks of cancer and influences responses to anticancer therapies. Thus, strategies to eliminate and/or exploit tumour hypoxia have long been explored, although with limited success to date. Herein, the authors describe new insights into hypoxia biology, discuss the implications of these advances for novel hypoxia-directed therapeutic strategies, and review the progress made with longstanding methods for targeting hypoxic tumours.
Journal Article