A Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) research team has found that the overgrowth of connective called fibrosis may block the effectiveness of immunotherapies against metastatic breast cancer.
Their report published in PNAS also finds that plerixafor, a drug approved to mobilise blood system stem cells in the treatment of lymphoma and multiple myeloma patients, can reduce fibrosis in both primary and metastatic breast tumours and improve response to immunotherapy in mouse models.
"Improving the survival of patients with metastatic breast cancer remains a significant challenge; and while immunotherapy, which harnesses the power of the immune system against cancer, has shown some promise, it remains less effective against metastatic breast cancer," says Ivy Chen, PhD, post-doctoral fellow in the Edwin L. Steele Laboratories for Tumour Biology in the MGH Department of Radiation Oncology and lead author of the PNAS report. "While fibrosis has been extensively studied in primary breast tumours, little is known about the level of fibrosis and its role in immunosuppression in metastatic lesions."
A key focus of research in the Steele Labs, directed by Rakesh Jain, PhD, senior author of the PNAS report, has been understanding how physical features of tumours can impede the effectiveness of cancer therapies.
Many treatment-resistant tumours are what is called desmoplastic - characterised by an overgrowth of connective tissue, which can block or even repel cancer-killing T cells from entering tumours, as well as inhibiting the effectiveness of traditional anti-cancer therapies.
Studies in other types of cancer have identified a role for the CXCL12/CXCR4 signalling pathway, known to regulate immune cells, in resistance to immunotherapies.
In their investigation of this potentially important signalling pathway in metastatic breast cancer, the MGH team found the following:
Overall this study was the first to show that primary and metastatic breast tumours are highly fibrotic, and identified a correlation between CXCR4 expression, fibrosis and immunosuppression in primary and metastatic breast cancer.
Significantly, it showed that CXCR4 inhibition may enhance the effectiveness of immunotherapy for metastatic breast cancer.
"Our findings suggest that fibrosis-targeting drugs, such as plerixafor, may be able to benefit breast cancer patients with late-stage, metastatic disease." says Jain, the Cook Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School "Most importantly, because not all metastatic breast cancers respond to immunotherapy, CXCR4 inhibition may improve response to those treatments by reducing fibrosis and immunosuppression. Our findings provide the necessary data and rationale for clinical trials to test the efficacy of combining CXCR4 inhibition using plerixafor, an FDA-approved drug for other indications, with immune checkpoint blockade for metastatic breast cancer patients."
Co-author Robert Langer, ScD, Koch Institute Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, adds, "With more than 40,000 women dying from breast cancer annually in the U.S. alone, this work provides a rapidly translatable strategy and potential hope for these patients."
Source: Massachusetts General Hospital
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