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Effects of Chemotherapy Agents on Circulating Leukocyte Populations: Potential Implications for the Success of CAR-T Cell Therapies

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13092225

Keywords

immunotherapy; combination therapy; adoptive cell therapy; CAR-T cell therapy; chemotherapy; cytotoxic CD8(+) T cells; tumour microenvironment; immunosuppression

Categories

Funding

  1. Health Services Charitable Gifts Board, Adelaide
  2. SA Cancer Council Beat Cancer Project Hospital Research Support Package
  3. Neurosurgical Research Foundation

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CAR-T cell therapy is a promising approach for cancer treatment, especially effective for blood cancers but less so for solid cancers. Chemotherapy not only kills cancer cells but also modulates the immune system, potentially influencing the manufacturing and anti-cancer activity of CAR-T cells. Further research is needed to explore the optimal integration of CAR-T cell therapies with cytotoxic chemotherapy for solid cancers.
Simple Summary CAR-T cell therapy is a new approach to cancer treatment that is based on manipulating a patient's own T cells such that they become able to seek and destroy cancer cells in a highly specific manner. This approach is showing remarkable efficacy in treating some types of blood cancers but so far has been much less effective against solid cancers. Here, we review the diverse effects of chemotherapy agents on circulating leukocyte populations and find that, despite some negative effects over the short term, chemotherapy can favourably modulate the immune systems of cancer patients over the longer term. Since blood is the starting material for CAR-T cell production, we propose that these effects could significantly influence the success of manufacturing, and anti-cancer activity, of CAR-T cells. Thus, if timed correctly, chemotherapy-induced changes to circulating immune cells could allow CAR-T cells to unleash more effective anti-tumour responses. Adoptive T-cell therapy using autologous T cells genetically modified to express cancer-specific chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) has emerged as a novel approach for cancer treatment. CAR-T cell therapy has been approved in several major jurisdictions for treating refractory or relapsed cases of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. However, in solid cancer patients, several clinical studies of CAR-T cell therapy have demonstrated minimal therapeutic effects, thus encouraging interest in better integrating CAR-T cells with other treatments such as conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy. Increasing evidence shows that not only do chemotherapy drugs have tumoricidal effects, but also significantly modulate the immune system. Here, we discuss immunomodulatory effects of chemotherapy drugs on circulating leukocyte populations, including their ability to enhance cytotoxic effects and preserve the frequency of CD8(+) T cells and to deplete immunosuppressive populations including regulatory T cells and myeloid-derived suppressor cells. By modulating the abundance and phenotype of leukocytes in the blood (the 'raw material' for CAR-T cell manufacturing), we propose that prior chemotherapy could facilitate production of the most effective CAR-T cell products. Further research is required to directly test this concept and identify strategies for the optimal integration of CAR-T cell therapies with cytotoxic chemotherapy for solid cancers.

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