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Scientists work to strengthen the synergy of chemotherapy and immunotherapy against cancer

Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University News Apr 21, 2017

In the war on cancer, powerful chemotherapy agents are increasingly packaged with immunotherapy that primes a patient’s immune system to better battle the disease.

To strengthen their synergy, scientists are now focusing on immune cells that normally help the body keep peace but are problematic when it comes to these two working together to fight cancer.

“We call this an overlooked aspect of chemotherapy and radiation therapy as well because it’s an unwanted response but a natural one,” said Dr. Gang Zhou, immunologist at the Georgia Cancer Center and assistant professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University.

Zhou, principal investigator on a new $1.7 million grant from the National Cancer Institute, is talking about how in response to some powerful chemotherapy agents, the body can begin to produce myeloid–derived suppressor cells, or MDSCs, that typically help calm the immune response.

Some chemotherapy drugs, like the common agent cyclophosphamide, used for a wide range of lymphomas, leukemia, breast, ovarian and other cancers, are known for their ability to reduce the rapid cell division that is a cancer hallmark. Cyclophosphamide also is known to stimulate the immune system. But seemingly paradoxically, this and other common chemotherapy agents also increase the number of MDSCs. As the name implies, these bone–marrow derived immune cells can detract from the efficacy of immunotherapy and chemotherapy as well, by naturally suppressing the immune response.

In fact, chemotherapy induced MDSCs, called T–iMDSCs, directly suppress T cells, key drivers of the immune response that are often targets of immunotherapy. Early data suggests T–iMDSCs also proactively aid a tumor–friendly environ by also inducing cancer stem cells – which make more cancer cells – and enabling the tumor to spread, Zhou said. He notes that activating the immune system also is one way certain types of chemotherapy work. Interestingly, his research team has shown that the same cyclophosphamide doses that stimulate myeloid cells also activate the immune system.

“We want to help make these key pieces work better together,” said Zhou, whose new grant will help provide more insight into how these T–iMDSCs occur and what can be done to suppress them.

“We want to preserve the good things chemotherapy can do and add more targeted therapies to attenuate unwanted side effects,” he said.

As an example, adoptive T–cell therapy is an emerging immunotherapy strategy, which utilizes tumor–reactive T–cells, either isolated and expanded from a patient’s white blood cells or created from a patient’s own normal T–cells through biomedical engineering, to fight against cancer. T–iMDSCs can directly counter that effort.

Zhou and his colleagues have shown that mice with advanced lymphoma that received chemotherapy initially had a robust anti–tumor response when also given adoptive T–cell therapy. But they also began to produce more of the immunosuppressive myeloid cells that ultimately helped enable relapse of the disease. The scientists suspect the cell production was again a natural balancing act in a body where cancer, and now a drug, were both inducing inflammation. They found that depleting production of T–iMDSCs by giving yet another chemotherapy drug that also targets rapid cell reproduction – including these proliferating myeloid cells – prevented tumor recurrence, he and colleagues reported in the journal Cancer Research.

“Right now we tend to think chemotherapy primes the patient to make the way for immunotherapy to be more effective,” Zhou said. But his research team was among the early groups to find myeloid cells in the mix. The new NCI grant is enabling additional animal studies and human studies as well that will provide
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