Kaytlyn C. McNeal , Kirsten M. Reeves , Patrick N. Song , Suzanne E. Lapi , Anna G. Sorace , Benjamin M. Larimer
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This investigation sought to understand the kinetics and heterogeneity of tumor hypoxia and their implications in affecting responses to immunotherapeutic interventions with and without evofosfamide.</p></div><div><h3>Purpose</h3><p>This study aimed to investigate the influence of hypoxia on immune checkpoint inhibition, evofosfamide monotherapy, and their combination on colorectal cancer (CRC). Employing positron emission tomography (PET) imaging, we developed novel analytical methods to quantify and characterize tumor hypoxia severity and distribution.</p></div><div><h3>Procedures</h3><p>Murine CRC models were longitudinally imaged with [<sup>18</sup>F]-fluoromisonidazole (FMISO)-PET to quantify tumor hypoxia during checkpoint blockade (anti-CTLA-4 + and anti-PD1 +/− evofosfamide). Metrics including maximum tumor [<sup>18</sup>F]FMISO uptake (FMISOmax) and mean tumor [<sup>18</sup>F]FMISO uptake (FMISOmean) were quantified and compared with normal muscle tissue (average muscle FMISO uptake (mAvg) and muscle standard deviation (mSD)). Histogram distributions were used to evaluate heterogeneity of tumor hypoxia.</p></div><div><h3>Findings</h3><p>Severe hypoxia significantly impeded immunotherapy effectiveness consistent with an immunosuppressive microenvironment. Hypoxia-specific PET imaging revealed a striking degree of spatial heterogeneity in tumor hypoxia, with some regions exhibiting significantly more severe hypoxia than others. The study identified FMISOmax as a robust predictor of immunotherapy response, emphasizing the impact of localized severe hypoxia on tumor volume control during therapy. Interestingly, evofosfamide did not directly reduce hypoxia but markedly improved the response to immunotherapy, uncovering an alternative mechanism for its efficacy.</p></div><div><h3>Conclusions</h3><p>These results enhance our comprehension of the interplay between hypoxia and immune checkpoint inhibition within the tumor microenvironment, offering crucial insights for the development of personalized cancer treatment strategies. Non-invasive hypoxia quantification through molecular imaging evaluating hypoxia severity may be an effective tool in guiding treatment planning, predicting therapy response, and ultimately improving patient outcomes across diverse cancer types and tumor microenvironments. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景肿瘤微环境中的缺氧是影响免疫疗法(包括免疫检查点抑制疗法)疗效的一个关键因素。氧气供应不足是缺氧的特征,已被认为是各种癌症进展的核心决定因素。作为一种潜在的治疗策略,缺氧激活原药伊沃夫斯法胺(evofosfamide)的再次出现引发了人们对解决缺氧在免疫疗法反应中的作用的兴趣。本研究旨在了解肿瘤缺氧的动力学和异质性,以及它们对使用或不使用依佛酰胺的免疫治疗干预反应的影响。目的 本研究旨在探讨缺氧对免疫检查点抑制、依佛酰胺单药治疗以及它们联合治疗结直肠癌(CRC)的影响。采用正电子发射断层扫描(PET)成像,我们开发了新的分析方法来量化和描述肿瘤缺氧的严重程度和分布。程序用[18F]-氟咪唑(FMISO)-PET对小鼠CRC模型进行纵向成像,以量化检查点阻断(抗CTLA-4 +和抗PD1 +/- evofosfamide)期间的肿瘤缺氧情况。量化的指标包括肿瘤[18F]FMISO最大摄取量(FMISOmax)和肿瘤[18F]FMISO平均摄取量(FMISOmean),并与正常肌肉组织(肌肉FMISO平均摄取量(mAvg)和肌肉标准偏差(mSD))进行比较。研究结果严重缺氧会明显影响免疫治疗的效果,这与免疫抑制微环境一致。缺氧特异性 PET 成像显示,肿瘤缺氧具有显著的空间异质性,某些区域的缺氧程度明显高于其他区域。研究发现FMISOmax是免疫治疗反应的可靠预测指标,强调了局部严重缺氧对治疗期间肿瘤体积控制的影响。有趣的是,依佛酰胺并不能直接降低缺氧,但却能明显改善免疫疗法的反应,这揭示了其疗效的另一种机制。结论 这些结果加深了我们对肿瘤微环境中缺氧与免疫检查点抑制之间相互作用的理解,为制定个性化的癌症治疗策略提供了重要的见解。通过分子成像评估缺氧严重程度的非侵入性缺氧量化可能是指导治疗计划、预测治疗反应并最终改善不同癌症类型和肿瘤微环境中患者预后的有效工具。该研究为将这些发现转化为临床实践奠定了基础,通过解决肿瘤缺氧问题促进免疫疗法方案的优化,从而提高癌症治疗的疗效。
[18F]FMISO-PET imaging reveals the role of hypoxia severity in checkpoint blockade response
Context
Hypoxia within the tumor microenvironment is a critical factor influencing the efficacy of immunotherapy, including immune checkpoint inhibition. Insufficient oxygen supply, characteristic of hypoxia, has been recognized as a central determinant in the progression of various cancers. The reemergence of evofosfamide, a hypoxia-activated prodrug, as a potential treatment strategy has sparked interest in addressing the role of hypoxia in immunotherapy response. This investigation sought to understand the kinetics and heterogeneity of tumor hypoxia and their implications in affecting responses to immunotherapeutic interventions with and without evofosfamide.
Purpose
This study aimed to investigate the influence of hypoxia on immune checkpoint inhibition, evofosfamide monotherapy, and their combination on colorectal cancer (CRC). Employing positron emission tomography (PET) imaging, we developed novel analytical methods to quantify and characterize tumor hypoxia severity and distribution.
Procedures
Murine CRC models were longitudinally imaged with [18F]-fluoromisonidazole (FMISO)-PET to quantify tumor hypoxia during checkpoint blockade (anti-CTLA-4 + and anti-PD1 +/− evofosfamide). Metrics including maximum tumor [18F]FMISO uptake (FMISOmax) and mean tumor [18F]FMISO uptake (FMISOmean) were quantified and compared with normal muscle tissue (average muscle FMISO uptake (mAvg) and muscle standard deviation (mSD)). Histogram distributions were used to evaluate heterogeneity of tumor hypoxia.
Findings
Severe hypoxia significantly impeded immunotherapy effectiveness consistent with an immunosuppressive microenvironment. Hypoxia-specific PET imaging revealed a striking degree of spatial heterogeneity in tumor hypoxia, with some regions exhibiting significantly more severe hypoxia than others. The study identified FMISOmax as a robust predictor of immunotherapy response, emphasizing the impact of localized severe hypoxia on tumor volume control during therapy. Interestingly, evofosfamide did not directly reduce hypoxia but markedly improved the response to immunotherapy, uncovering an alternative mechanism for its efficacy.
Conclusions
These results enhance our comprehension of the interplay between hypoxia and immune checkpoint inhibition within the tumor microenvironment, offering crucial insights for the development of personalized cancer treatment strategies. Non-invasive hypoxia quantification through molecular imaging evaluating hypoxia severity may be an effective tool in guiding treatment planning, predicting therapy response, and ultimately improving patient outcomes across diverse cancer types and tumor microenvironments. It sets the stage for the translation of these findings into clinical practice, facilitating the optimization of immunotherapy regimens by addressing tumor hypoxia and thereby enhancing the efficacy of cancer treatments.
期刊介绍:
Nuclear Medicine and Biology publishes original research addressing all aspects of radiopharmaceutical science: synthesis, in vitro and ex vivo studies, in vivo biodistribution by dissection or imaging, radiopharmacology, radiopharmacy, and translational clinical studies of new targeted radiotracers. The importance of the target to an unmet clinical need should be the first consideration. If the synthesis of a new radiopharmaceutical is submitted without in vitro or in vivo data, then the uniqueness of the chemistry must be emphasized.
These multidisciplinary studies should validate the mechanism of localization whether the probe is based on binding to a receptor, enzyme, tumor antigen, or another well-defined target. The studies should be aimed at evaluating how the chemical and radiopharmaceutical properties affect pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, or therapeutic efficacy. Ideally, the study would address the sensitivity of the probe to changes in disease or treatment, although studies validating mechanism alone are acceptable. Radiopharmacy practice, addressing the issues of preparation, automation, quality control, dispensing, and regulations applicable to qualification and administration of radiopharmaceuticals to humans, is an important aspect of the developmental process, but only if the study has a significant impact on the field.
Contributions on the subject of therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals also are appropriate provided that the specificity of labeled compound localization and therapeutic effect have been addressed.