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Bioelectricity ; 6(2): 108-117, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39119566

ABSTRACT

Pancreatic cancer is associated with a poor prognosis and immunotherapy alone has not demonstrated sufficient efficacy in the treatment of nonresectable tumors. Nano-Pulse Stimulation™ therapy (NPS™) applies nanosecond electric pulses that lead to regulated cell death, exposing tumor antigen to the immune system. To establish a primary Pan02 tumor, mice were intradermally injected with Pan02 cells into the right flank. Secondary, rechallenge tumors and distal, secondary tumors (abscopal response) were established by injecting Pan02 cells into the opposite left flank. After 5 days of tumor growth, one of the tumors was treated with NPS, followed by injection with an immune-enhancing agent to stimulate an immune response. Growth of the treated primary tumor and untreated rechallenge tumors (injected 60-days post-treatment) or distal secondary tumors (injected simultaneously with the primary) was monitored. NPS in combination with the adjuvant and TLR agonist, resiquimod (RES), was the optimal treatment regimen for both eliminating a primary Pan02 tumor as well as inhibiting growth of a Pan02 cell rechallenge tumor. This inhibition of the rechallenge tumor injected 2 months after eliminating the primary tumor suggests a long-term immune response had been stimulated. Additional support for this came from the observations that depleting CD8+ T-cells reduced inhibition of rechallenge tumor growth by 35% and rechallenge tumors had 3-fold more CD8+ T-cells than tumors injected after surgical resection of the primary tumor. When the NPS-treated tumor was immediately injected with the anti-OX40 antibody to agonize the function of the costimulatory T cell receptor, OX40, up to 80% of untreated abscopal tumors were eliminated. NPS plus RES was the most effective at both eliminating a primary tumor and inhibiting a rechallenge tumor. NPS treatment followed by injection of aOX40 was the most effective at inhibiting the growth of an untreated abscopal tumor.

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