Tumor radiation therapy creates therapeutic vaccine responses to the colorectal cancer antigen GUCY2C

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Abstract

Purpose Radiation therapy (RT) is thought to produce clinical responses in cancer patients, not only through direct toxicity to cancer cells and supporting tumor stroma cells, but also through activation of immunologic effectors. More recently, RT has potentiated the local and systemic effects of cancer immunotherapy (IT). However, combination regimens that maximize immunologic and clinical efficacy remain undefined. Methods and Materials We evaluated the impact of local RT on adenoviral-mediated vaccination against the colorectal cancer antigen GUCY2C (Ad5-GUCY2C) in a murine subcutaneous tumor model using mouse CT26 colon cancer cells (CT26-GUCY2C). Immune responses were assessed by ELISpot, and clinical responses were assessed by tumor size and incidence. Results The specific sequence of tumor-directed RT preceding Ad5-GUCY2C IT transformed inactive therapeutic Ad5-GUCY2C vaccination into a curative vaccine. GUCY2C-specific T cell responses were amplified (P

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Witek, M., Blomain, E. S., Magee, M. S., Xiang, B., Waldman, S. A., & Snook, A. E. (2014). Tumor radiation therapy creates therapeutic vaccine responses to the colorectal cancer antigen GUCY2C. International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics, 88(5), 1188–1195. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2013.12.043

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