Abstract
Purpose
High intratumoral pressure, caused by tumor cell-to-cell interactions, interstitial fluid pressure, and surrounding stromal composition, plays a substantial role in resistance to intratumoral drug delivery and distribution. Radiation therapy (XRT) is commonly administered in conjunction with different intratumoral drugs, but assessing how radiation can reduce pressure locally and help intratumoral drug administration and retention is important.
Methods and Materials
344SQ-parental or 344SQ-anti-programmed cell death protein 1-resistant lung adenocarcinoma cells were established in 129Sv/Ev mice, and irradiated with either 1 Gy × 2, 5 Gy × 3, 8 Gy × 3, 12 Gy × 3, or 20 Gy × 1. Intratumoral pressure was measured every 3 to 4 days after XRT. Contrast dye was injected into the tumors 3- and 6-days after XRT, and imaged to measure drug retention.
Results
In the 344SQ-parental model, low-dose radiation (1 Gy × 2) created an early window of reduced intratumoral pressure 1 to 3 days after XRT compared with untreated control. High-dose stereotactic radiation (12 Gy × 3) reduced intratumoral pressure 3 to 12 days after XRT, and 20 Gy × 1 showed a delayed pressure reduction on day 12. Intermediate doses of radiation did not significantly affect intratumoral pressure. In the more aggressive 344SQ-anti-programmed cell death protein 1-resistant model, low-dose radiation reduced pressure 1 to 5 days after XRT, and 12 Gy × 3 reduced pressure 1 to 3 days after XRT. Moreover, both 1 Gy × 2 and 12 Gy × 3 significantly improved drug retention 3 days after XRT; however, there was no significance detected 6 days after XRT. Lastly, a histopathologic evaluation showed that 1 Gy × 2 reduced collagen deposition within the tumor, and 12 Gy × 3 led to more necrotic core and higher extracellular matrix formation in the tumor periphery.
Conclusions
Optimized low-dose XRT, as well as higher stereotactic XRT regimen led to a reduction in intratumoral pressure and increased drug retention. The findings from this work can be readily translated into the clinic to enhance intratumoral injections of various anticancer agents.
Introduction
Medical advances over the past years have elucidated and refined the concept of using immunotherapy in solid tumors. There is a growing number of clinical trials using immunotherapy in conjunction with chemotherapy and radiation therapy (XRT), emphasizing the concept that combining immunotherapy with other treatment modalities may be critical to achieve robust antitumor responses.
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Shedding light on radiation-based combinations is particularly critical because XRT may prime antitumor immunity and reduce intratumoral pressure, the latter of which is the primary focus of this study.
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The rationale and importance of reducing intratumoral/intraoncotic pressure by XRT stem from the need to enhance intratumoral drug delivery and retention. Currently, 24 of 130 clinical studies investigating immune modulating therapies involve intratumoral routes of administration.
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The benefits of doing so include avoiding off-target toxicity, using a lower and less toxic drug dose, and priming local T cells for immune response.
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Developments in image guided local drug injection techniques are growing fast. However, elevated intratumoral pressure presents a barrier because the pressure differential between the center and outer regions of solid tumors can cause hypoxia, increase metastatic potential, and compromise successful intratumoral drug delivery.
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High interstitial fluid pressure–An obstacle in cancer therapy.
Although the mechanisms are not entirely understood, elevated tumor interstitial or intratumoral pressure can be attributed to blood-vessel leakiness, lymph vessel abnormalities, interstitial fibrosis, modified interstitial matrix, and tumor cells proliferating within a confined space.
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To address this issue, we propose the use of XRT to reduce the pressure-induced convection force that opposes the diffusion of therapeutic agents injected intratumorally. Cancer cells with their inhibitory stroma produce cytokines, such as transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), which further contribute to abnormal vasculature and thus elevate intratumoral pressure.
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We recently showed that low-dose radiation therapy can, in fact, reduce TGF-β levels locally and modulate the tumor microenvironment (TME).
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Beyond reducing intratumoral pressure, XRT has also been shown to reoxygenate certain portions of irradiated tumors and increase pO
2 levels, hence increasing tumor treatability by overcoming hypoxia.
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Although certain physical and cellular attributes contributing to intratumoral pressure are well understood, many aspects remain that warrant further research, especially in the context of XRT.
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Current clinical trials testing the combination of immunotherapy with radiotherapy.
In this paper, we seek to optimize the radiation dose and fractionation schedule to find the best window for intratumoral drug delivery. To our knowledge, this is the first study to comprehensively explore how to use radiation to decrease intratumoral pressure, thereby increasing the success of intratumoral drug delivery into solid tumors.
Methods and Materials
Mice and tumor establishment
All animal protocols were reviewed and approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. 344SQ-parental (344SQ-P) or 344SQ-anti-programmed cell death protein 1-resistant (344SQ-R) lung adenocarcinoma cells were subcutaneously implanted on day 0 in the hind legs of 8- to 12-week old 129Sv/Ev mice, at a dose of 5 × 105 cells for parental and 0.5 × 105 for resistant. When tumors reached 7 to 8 mm in diameter, they were locally irradiated using a Cesium source. The radiation doses tested were 1 Gy × 2, 5 Gy × 3, 8 Gy × 3, 12 Gy × 3, and 20 Gy × 1. The different fractions were scheduled such that all treatments were completed on day 10 after tumor inoculation. Intratumoral pressure was recorded using a pressure transducer (Compass CT) at various timepoints (days 11, 13, 18, 22, 27, and 33), and measurements were graphed accordingly. Tumor growth was also recorded twice per week using digital calipers, and the mice were euthanized when the tumor reached 14 mm in diameter.
In vivo evaluation of percutaneous intratumoral delivery and retention
344SQ-P tumors were established in 129Sv/Ev mice. XRT was delivered on day 7 to the experimental groups as follows: Untreated control (Ctrl), 1 Gy × 2, 5 Gy × 3, 8 Gy × 3, 12 Gy × 3, and 20 Gy × 1. Intratumoral drug delivery deposition and retention were evaluated by advancing a 25-gauge needle into the tumor under ultrasound visualization (Siemens Acuson). Ultrasound imaging guidance was used to ensure accurate positioning of the needle within the lesion. Next, 100 uL of an iodinated contrast agent (Visipaque 320) was delivered via the 25-gauge needle into the tumor under live fluoroscopic imaging (Siemens Artis-Q). To standardize the injection rate, the injections were performed using a syringe pump (Harvard Apparatus) at a rate of 5 cc per minute. The Siemens Artis Q C-Arm was run at 7.5 frames per second to monitor the injections.
The procedures were performed by an interventional radiologist with 7 years of experience with preclinical and clinical intratumoral injection procedures. Animals were immediately scanned with microCT imaging with 100 micron resolution (Bruker SkyScan). The volumetric images were analyzed with a 3-dimensional image analysis software program (MIM Maestro) by a radiologist with 10 years of volumetric imaging analysis. The tumor volume, as well as the volume of distribution of the injected contrast agent, were calculated. The percent contrast agent retention was calculated by dividing contrast volume by tumor volume, multiplied by 100 to obtain percentage tumor fill.
Tumors histopathologic evaluation
344SQ-P tumor cells were subcutaneously injected in 129Sv/Ev mice on day 0. When tumors reached 7 to 8 mm in diameter, low-dose XRT (1 Gy × 2) was given on days 7 and 8, and high-dose XRT (12 Gy × 3) was given on days 7, 8, and 9. Low-dose tumors were harvested on day 10 and high-dose tumors on day 13. The mice were euthanized, and the tumors were dissected and fixed with 10% neutral buffered formalin solution. Formalin fixed tumors were cut in half through the middle on the larger diameter plan, and the largest cut surfaces were obtained, processed, and embedded into paraffin blocks.
From the paraffin blocks, 4-µm thick sections of tumor tissues were cut and mounted on glass slides, and then stained with hematoxylin and eosin and Masson's trichrome stains per the methods in the book
Histotechnology: A Self-Instructional Text. The stained slides were examined with an Olympus BX41 microscope, and then scanned with an Aperio Scanscope AT2. For the quantification of extracellular collagen stained with the Masson's trichrome method, we used Aperio image analysis algorithms.
Discussion
Intratumoral pressure is an essential obstacle that must be addressed and overcome to improve intratumoral drug delivery and retention. Solving this issue would allow for intratumoral drugs to become more homogenously distributed throughout the tumor and, in turn, enhance antitumor responses.
21Physiological barriers to delivery of monoclonal antibodies and other macromolecules in tumors.
The increased pressure present in cancer cells compared with normal tissue cells can be explained by interstitial fluid pressure, solid stress (SS), stiffness, and microarchitecture.
22Physical traits of cancer.
The interstitial fluid space is primarily held together by SS, which is directly correlated with multiple factors, including ECM (comprised of collagen and hyaluronan) and cancer-associated fibroblasts. Therefore, an increase in ECM results in an overall increase in intratumoral pressure. Additionally, the cross-linking of ECM is the primary cause of matrix stiffening, as well as changes in the matrix architecture.
22Physical traits of cancer.
The ECM not only increases intratumoral pressure, but also promotes tumor growth, cancer cell migration, and resistance to apoptosis.
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Since radiation can be administered in conjunction with different intratumoral drugs used to treat cancer (eg, oncolytic viruses, NLRP3 agonists, STING agonists, antibodies, nanoparticles), assessing how radiation can reduce intratumoral pressure and help intratumoral drug delivery, as well as retention, is important.
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The direct delivery of anticancer therapies into tumors, particularly immunostimulatory agents, is a flourishing strategy to overcome resistance mechanisms for systemically administered immunotherapies and associated toxicities.
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However, in practice, physical properties of tumors clearly also impose challenges to intratumoral delivery and deposition, even when the therapeutic agent is directly injected into the tumor.
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Adjuvant interventions that can modulate the tumor's physical properties (stiffness, fibrosis status, composition of inhibitory stroma and ECM) to render the lesion more amenable to intratumoral injection have the potential to substantially augment the efficacy of these therapies.
To assess how different doses of radiation (1 Gy × 2, 5 Gy × 3, 8 Gy × 3, 12 Gy × 3, 20 Gy × 1) would affect intratumoral pressure in the 344SQ-P murine model, we measured intratumoral pressure 1, 3, 8, and 12 days after the last fraction of XRT using a compass computed tomography pressure transducer. Additionally, tumor growth was recorded to see the efficacy of the different radiation doses. We found that all groups significantly hampered tumor growth with 1 Gy × 2, 12 Gy × 3, and 20 Gy × 1 being the most significant. Moreover, 12 Gy × 3 controlled tumor growth better than 8 Gy × 3. In addition, 12 Gy × 3 and 1 Gy × 2 had similar effects on tumor control.
Low-dose XRT created an early window of low intratumoral pressure 1 to 3 days after XRT. A recent study showed that low-dose XRT modulates the tumor stroma and downregulates cancer-associated fibroblasts,
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which causes the stroma to become more permeable and allows for effector immune cells (mainly natural killer and T cells) to infiltrate the TME. Once the natural killer and T cells infiltrate the stroma, immune-mediated killing begins. Additionally, TGF-β is reduced with low-dose XRT.
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Although reduction of intratumoral pressure with low-dose XRT was attributed to modulation of the stroma and immune-mediated killing, high-dose XRT physically killed tumor cells. With more necrosis and space between tumor cells, intratumoral pressure dropped. Three fractions of 12 Gy produced a sustained window of low intratumoral pressure 3, 8, and 12 days after XRT. The effects of a single fraction of 20 Gy were different in that pressure dropped in the early (day 1) and late (day 12) timepoints after XRT.
To further examine the effect of different radiation regimens on intratumoral pressure, we followed the same experimental design as the first experiment. However, instead of the 344SQ-P cell line, we established tumors with an aggressive 344SQ-R cell line (Kras mutated, p53 deficient).
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Similar to the previous experiment, all doses of radiation significantly controlled tumor growth, but there were differences among these experimental groups. In 344SQ-R, 3 fractions of 8 Gy controlled tumors similarly to 3 fractions of 12 Gy, but in the 344SQ-P model, 12 Gy proved to control tumor growth better than 8 Gy.
Another notable difference was that 2 fractions of 1 Gy underperformed the efficacy of 3 fractions of 12 Gy. This difference could be due to a more resilient inhibitory stroma associated with the 344SQ-R model, leading to reduced cluster of differentiation 4
+ and 8
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Low-dose XRT once again created an early window of decreased intratumoral pressure 1, 3, and 5 days after the last fraction of XRT in 344SQ-R, and 3 fractions of 12 Gy only reduced intratumoral pressure 1 day after XRT (as opposed to the parental model with reduced pressure on days 3-12). Three fractions of 5 Gy and 8 Gy also only reduced pressure 1 day after XRT.
Extensive imaging was conducted to measure percent tumor fill after different doses of XRT 3 and 6 days after treatment. First, 100μL of iodinated contrast dye (Visipaque 320) was injected into the tumor with a syringe pump (Harvard Apparatus) at a rate of 5 cc per minute. Concurrently, live imaging was conducted using the Siemens Artis Q C-Arm. The mice were then transferred to the Bruker SkyScan 1276 for high resolution microCT imaging. Percent tumor fill was calculated from the images produced using the following formula: (Contrast volume/tumor volume) × 100. When intratumoral pressure was too high, the osmotic/oncotic pressure causing the contrast dye to reenter the capillaries could be seen. Two fractions of 1 Gy showed a significant increase in tumor fill 3 days after XRT, confirming the early window of low intratumoral pressure in the previous experiments. As the pressure lowered, the contrast dye was more homogenously distributed around the TME. Moreover, 2 fractions of 1 Gy showed no significant increase in percent tumor fill 6 days after XRT, which is in line with the first set of experiments where intratumoral pressure was only reduced 1 to 3 days after 1 Gy × 2. Percent tumor fill of the 12 Gy group also followed the pressure readings from
Fig. 1B. Tumor fill was elevated 3 and 6 days after 12 Gy × 3, but was not statistically significant 6 days after XRT.
To investigate the mechanisms behind the increased tumor fill with 2 fractions of 1 Gy and 3 fractions of 12 Gy, a histopathologic evaluation was conducted using Masson's trichrome to stain for ECM, which consists mostly of collagen and hyaluronic acid (HA). Recent studies have shown that several drugs that target collagen and/or hyaluronic acid reduce interstitial fluid pressure, such as collagenase, PEGPH20 (targets HA), losartan (targets collagen and HA), and bevacizumab (targets vascular endothelial growth factor receptors).
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An initial analysis of the trichrome-stained slides showed a significant downregulation of ECM 2 days after low-dose XRT and an upregulation of ECM 4 days after high-dose XRT. The reduced ECM with low-dose XRT was as expected. As collagen is reduced in the interstitial space, SS is decreased and pressure is relieved from the tumor, enabling drugs to distribute intratumorally. Contrarily, the ECM was upregulated with 3 fractions of 12 Gy, most of which was observed to be deposited along the tumor periphery and the core presented with necrosis upon pathologic evaluation. One explanation of improved tumor fill with 12 Gy × 3 is that the upregulated peripheral ECM traps the intratumoral drugs inside and promotes retention. Overall, both doses of XRT (1 Gy × 2 and 12 Gy × 3) improved percent tumor fill; however, the underlying mechanisms are different.
Article info
Publication history
Published online: December 04, 2022
Accepted:
November 27,
2022
Received:
October 11,
2022
Footnotes
Sources of support: Bristol Myers Squibb funded this work.
Disclosures: Dr Welsh reports research support from GlaxoSmithKline, Bristol Meyers Squibb, Merck, Nanobiotix, RefleXion, Alkermes, Artidis, Mavu Pharma, Takeda, Varian, Checkmate Pharmaceuticals, and HotSpot Therapeutics. Dr Welsh also serves/served on the scientific advisory board for Legion Health care Partners, RefleXion Medical, MolecularMatch, Merck, AstraZeneca, Aileron Therapeutics, OncoResponse, Checkmate Pharmaceuticals, Mavu Pharma, Alpine Immune Sciences, Ventana Medical Systems, Nanobiotix, China Medical Tribune, GI Innovation, Genentech, and Nanorobotix, as well as serves as consultant for Lifescience Dynamics Limited. In addition, Dr Welsh has/had speaking engagements for Ventana Medical Systems, US Oncology, Alkermes, Boehringer Ingelheim, Accuray, and RSS; holds/held stock or ownership in Alpine Immune Sciences, Checkmate Pharmaceuticals, Healios, Mavu Pharma, Legion Health care Partners, MolecularMatch, Nanorobotix, OncoResponse, and RefleXion; and has accepted honoraria in the form of travel costs from Nanobiotix, RefleXion, Varian, Shandong University, The Korea Society of Radiology, Aileron Therapeutics, and Ventana. Moreover, Dr Welsh has the following patents: MP470 (amuvatinib), MRX34 regulation of PDL1, XRT technique to overcome immune resistance, and Radiotherapies and uses thereof. MD Anderson Cancer Center has a trademark for RadScopal. Dr Barsoumian has a patent for Radiotherapies and uses thereof. Dr Sheth is a Consultant for Replimune, StarPAX, Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and TriSalus. All other authors have no disclosures to declare.
Data sharing statement: All data generated and analyzed during this study are included in this published article (and its supplementary material files). Further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.
Copyright
© 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of American Society for Radiation Oncology.