Abstract
Purpose
Radiotherapy (RT), as part of trimodal therapy, is an attractive alternative treatment in patients with urothelial muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC). There is accumulating evidence suggesting the immunomodulatory effects of RT and its potential synergy when combined with immunotherapy. The aim of this review was to report on the most recent advances on this combination, including the mechanisms of RT immunomodulation, practical approach to combining RT and immunotherapy, and ongoing clinical trials in bladder cancer.
Methods
Using the PubMed database, we identified articles published between March 2004 and April 2020 on the combination of RT with immunotherapy in localized or metastatic MIBC. A search of the Clinicaltrials.gov and Clinicaltrialsregister.eu/ retrieved ongoing clinical trials on the topic as well.
Results
Combination of RT with immunotherapy leads to immunogenic cell death and an increase in immune markers thus leading to improved tumor control. For localized MIBC, there are safety concerns related to the use of concurrent immunotherapy with hypofractionated RT, thus neoadjuvant or adjuvant immunotherapy is preferred. In the metastatic setting, the combination of multi-site RT with SBRT-like doses (≥ 6 Gy per fraction) and concurrent immunotherapy seems most efficacious at harnessing the abscopal effect. At least 25 clinical trials combining immunotherapy and RT in MIBC are currently ongoing and will answer pending questions on safety, efficacy, and practical considerations on RT scheduling, fractionation, and targets volumes.
Conclusion
RT has the potential to synergize with immunotherapy to improve oncological outcomes in patient with localized or metastatic MIBC. Clinical trials results are eagerly awaited.
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Introduction
Trimodal therapy (TMT) is an attractive alternative treatment in patients with urothelial muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC). TMT involves transurethral resection of the bladder tumor (TURBT), followed by radiotherapy (RT) and concurrent chemotherapy [1]. Its efficacy is comparable to that of the surgery in an appropriately selected population [2, 3]. Unfortunately, despite advances in these strategies, the 5-year overall survival (OS) for patients with non-metastatic T2–T4a disease remains around 50% [4] while patients with metastatic disease have a 5-year OS of 13% [5]. Moreover, local control rates with TMT range from 60 to 80% depending on disease stage and patient characteristics [3, 4]. Thus, therapeutic innovations are urgently needed in the treatment of MIBC.
Immunotherapy has shown many promises in the past decade for the treatment of locally advanced and metastatic MIBC [6, 7]. Since 2016, five immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) targeting the programmed-cell-death-1 (PD-1) and programmed-cell-death-ligand-1 (PD-L1) pathway have been approved by the FDA as second-line agents in the treatment of metastatic MIBC patients who have progressed on Cisplatin-based chemotherapy [8,9,10,11,12]. These agents showed a benefit in overall response rate (ORR) [8, 10,11,12] and in the case of Pembrolizumab, an OS benefit compared to chemotherapy [9]. Atezolizumab and Pembrolizumab are also approved as first line treatment in patients who are cisplatin-ineligible and whose tumors/infiltrating immune cells express PD-L1 (≥ 5%) [13]. Despite these promising results, only about 20% of patients will respond to ICIs, although the majority of responders have a durable response [8, 14, 15].
There is an accumulating body of evidence showing the immunomodulatory role of RT and its increased efficacy when combined with immunotherapy [16,17,18,19]. Thus, combining ICIs with RT could enhance both local and occult distant disease control in MIBC. The aim of this literature review is to report on the most recent advances on the topic, including the mechanisms of RT immunomodulation, practical approach to combine RT and ICIs and perspectives on ongoing clinical trials in metastatic and localized MIBC.
Methods for evidence acquisition
A literature search was performed in the PubMed database for articles on immunotherapy and RT in localized or metastatic MIBC. The following keywords were used in various algorithms: “radiotherapy,” “radiation therapy,” “immunotherapy,” “immune checkpoint inhibitors,” “urothelial carcinoma,” “urothelial cancer,” “bladder cancer.” All sources published from March 2004 to April 2020 were included in the search. Original or review papers reporting on radiotherapy, immunotherapy, or the combination of, in localized or metastatic MIBC were included. Articles on upper urinary tract urothelial carcinomas and in language other than English or French were excluded. The articles were screened and further references relevant to the subject used. A search query was also done in Clinicaltrials.gov and Clinicaltrialsregister.eu to retrieve ongoing clinical trials on combined immunotherapy and RT in localized and/or metastatic MIBC.
Radiotherapy and the immune system
RT induces cell death by causing DNA damage, either directly through charged particles producing double strand breaks in DNA or indirectly by generating hydroxyl free radicals that will cause DNA damage, both leading to apoptotic cell death [20]. Apoptotic cell death has long been thought to be non-immunogenic; however, several pre-clinical studies have now shown that RT has both immunostimulatory and immunosuppressive properties through modulation of the tumor microenvironment (TME) (Table 1).
Immune-stimulating effects of RT
Immunogenic cell death and modulation of the tumor microenvironment
RT can induce a process known as immunogenic cell death by causing tumor cell stress and apoptosis, thus releasing tumor antigens in the TME [17, 21]. RT has been shown to induce the expression and release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) such as calreticulin, HSP70 and HMGB1 that are hallmarks of immunogenic cell death [16]. This process turns apoptotic cells into in-situ vaccines by releasing tumor antigens that are then presented to primed T-cells in the TME and draining lymph nodes [22]. Moreover, RT increases the expression of MHCI, pro-inflammatory cytokines as well as immune co-stimulatory molecules and adhesion molecules, thus facilitating CD8 + T-cell infiltration into the TME and priming [23]. Finally, RT can modulate the innate immune system by upregulating the complement pathway the co-stimulatory receptor NKG2D type II integral membrane protein leading to activation of NK cell-mediated responses [24].
Radiation-induced abscopal effect
The abscopal effect is the phenomenon by which systemic anti-tumor responses are observed outside of the primary site of local irradiation [25]. It has been described in a number of different malignancies, including metastatic renal cell carcinoma, melanoma and hepatocellular carcinoma among others [25]. The exact mechanisms of this phenomenon are not well known but are thought to be mediated by a systemic anti-tumor immune response [26]. Ionizing radiation is thought to increase tumor antigen presentation, subsequent activation of cytotoxic T-cells and increased production of a pro-inflammatory response [26]. Thus, combining RT with immunotherapy could provide an opportunity to boost abscopal response rates. In a mouse model of MIBC the combination of RT and anti-PD-L1 treatment resulted in significantly slower growth rate compared with RT alone in the irradiated xenograft tumors but also in the contralateral non-irradiated tumors, resulting in improved survival [27]. This abscopal effect has also been described when RT is combined with ICIs in several types of malignancies [28]. In a proof-of-principle clinical trial, Formenti et al. [19] showed an objective abscopal response in 9/34 patients (27%) with solid metastatic cancers that received GM-CSF and irradiation to one metastatic lesion. In a randomized phase 1 trial, Sundahl et al. compared Pembrolizumab with sequential versus concomitant stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) to the largest metastatic lesion in MIBC patients. There was a 44% ORR in non-irradiated metastatic sites when SBRT was given concomitantly vs. 0% when given sequentially, correlating with a median OS of 12.1 and 4.5 months, respectively [29]. Table 2 lists ongoing trials combining immunotherapy and RT in the metastatic setting, and the phase 2 trial NCT03601455 specifically studies the abscopal effect as a secondary objective.
Immune-suppressing effects of RT
Radiation-induced lymphopenia
Radiation-induced lymphopenia (RIL) is a well-recognized phenomenon that can develop in up to 70% of patients undergoing RT, especially when pelvic bony structures are irradiated [30]. RIL is characterized by acute preferential depletion of CD4 + T-cells and B-cells [31]. In a study of 34 MIBC patients, RT caused a significant decline in the number of circulating lymphocytes for up to 5 years [32]. Interestingly, patients that were disease-free for five years had normalized lymphocyte counts to pretherapy levels within three years of RT whereas patients with recurrent or residual disease had significantly lower rate of RIL recovery [32]. Other studies have established RIL as a negative prognostic factor [33, 34]. Furthermore, lymphopenia can reduce the efficacy of ICIs [35, 36]. In a retrospective study of 167 patients treated with Nivolumab or Pembrolizumab, baseline and 3-month lymphopenia were associated with shorter PFS [35]. Interestingly, prior RT was the variable most strongly associated with persistent lymphopenia at 3-months and these patients had shorter PFS than patients whose lymphopenia recovered at 3-months [35]. High lymphocyte counts are also associated with better OS in ICIs-treated cancer patients [33, 37]. Prospective studies are needed to firmly establish a causal relationship between RIL and clinical response to ICIs, but the available data suggests that RIL impairs ICIs efficacy.
Effects on tumor infiltrating immune cells
RT has also been shown to alter the profile of inhibitory immune cells infiltrating the TME. For instance, SBRT delivered to melanoma and breast cancer mice models caused an increase in the proportion of CD4 + T regulatory cells (T-reg) infiltrating the tumors [38]. This would a priori be detrimental to the anti-tumor response; however the increase in infiltrating T-reg cells was abrogated by addition of anti-PD-1 blockade, resulting in improved local control [38]. In their abscopal model on MIBC, Rompre-Brodeur et al. [27] showed that, compared to RT alone, mice treated with combined RT and ICIs had increased infiltration of cytotoxic T-cells, downregulation of immunosuppressive genes, and upregulation of T-cell activation markers. RT has also been shown to increase the infiltration and activation of myeloid-derived suppressive cells (MDSCs), which are known mediators of immunosuppression [39]. In another study of patients with oligometastatic solid tumors, treatment with concurrent SBRT and Sunitinib (but not SBRT alone) decreased the numbers of MDSC and T-reg cells, correlating with improved PFS and cause-specific survival [40].
Effects on immune cell surface marker expression
RT has also been shown to upregulate PD-L1 expression in several cancer types, notably in MIBC [41, 42]. RT upregulated the expression of PD-L1 in the human HT1197 and the murine MB49 MIBC cells and PD-L1 blockade in an orthotopic MB49 model was associated with tumor growth delay following irradiation [41]. Interestingly, when specimens from MIBC patients treated with chemoradiation were analyzed, high PD-L1 expression correlated with higher clinical stage, lower complete response rate and reduced disease-free survival. There was also a positive correlation between PD-L1 overexpression and lymph nodes metastases or loco-regional failure [41]. RT has also been shown to upregulate CTLA4 expression in T-reg cells [43].
Practical considerations of combining RT with ICIs in MIBC
Although there is a large body of evidence supporting the synergistic effect of immunotherapy and RT, many questions remain on how to optimally combine these two modalities. Studies emphasize the importance of the sequencing, total dose, fractionation, and target volumes in harnessing this synergy.
Sequencing
Pre-clinical studies have explored the optimal sequencing of RT and immunotherapy in eliciting a synergistic immune response. In a colorectal cancer mouse model, Young et al. [44] showed that anti-CTLA4 was most effective when given 7 days prior to RT versus one day or one week after. Interestingly, anti-OXO was most effective when delivered one day post RT, highlighting the nuances in optimally combining RT with different immunotherapy regimen [44]. While some pre-clinical data show an increase PD-L1 expression and improved survival when RT was given concurrently with ICIs [41, 44], we were unable to show any difference in tumor growth rate inhibition when ICI was given either neoadjuvantly, concomitantly or adjuvantly with TMT (Tholomier et al. [45], in press). In contrast, in Sundahl et al. phase I trial of metastatic MIBC, ORR was 44.4% in the concomitant Pembrolizumab-SBRT vs. 0% in the sequential arm [29]. Ongoing clinical trials are evaluating combined immunotherapy with TMT in MIBC with various administration schedules: SWOG 1806 (NCT03775265) and KEYNOTE-992 (NCT04241185) are assessing concurrent chemoradiotherapy with atezolizumab or pembrolizumab, the CCTG BL13 study (NCT03768570) is evaluating adjuvant durvalumab after TMT, whereas the soon to open UK trial will examine neoadjuvant durvalumab followed by TMT.
Doses and fractionation
Different RT fractionation schemes and doses have been shown to have various immunomodulatory effects, either favoring immunostimulation or immunosuppression [46]. Suppressor T-cells are particularly radiosensitive whereas macrophages and regulatory T-cells are more radioresistant [23, 46]. This poses a challenge in normalizing response to treatment as RT doses and techniques can vary, ranging from delivering a single fraction to a metastatic deposit to a more protracted course of several weeks of conventionally or hypofractionated RT [47].
Pre-clinical studies have shown that dose per fraction greater than 6–8 Gy are required to produce an effective immunogenic response [22, 46, 48]. Furthermore, most of the studies describing an abscopal effect used SBRT or SBRT-like dose regimens (doses per fraction of ≥ 6 Gy) [49]. The abscopal effect also seems to be related to the fractionation used. In many tumor types, a multi-fractionated regimen was superior to single dose regimens in decreasing tumor growth at non-irradiated sites [18, 48]. In a mouse model of breast and colon cancer, while all fractionations were effective at controlling the primary irradiated tumor, only the multi-fractionated regimens (8 Gyx3 fractions or 6 Gyx5 fractions), but not the single dose regimen (20 Gy/1 fraction), synergized with anti-CTLA4 to decrease distant tumor growth [48]. Specifically in bladder cancer mouse models, ICIs were more effective when combined with a 10 Gyx2 [27] or 6.25 Gyx2 [45] RT regimens than with a 10 Gyx1 regimen. In the clinical setting, establishing the ideal RT dose and fractionation when combined with immunotherapy remains a challenge requiring further evaluation.
RT volume and sites of disease
RT could be delivered to the whole pelvis, to the bladder only, bone metastases or visceral metastases. In the context of TMT, it would be intuitive to treat the gross tumor disease ± whole bladder. However, it remains unanswered whether pelvic elective nodal irradiation (ENI) could directly or indirectly affect the immune response. Preclinical data suggest that ENI can decrease the synergy between RT and ICIs likely by inhibiting the antigen-presentation process within the TME and in nearby draining lymph nodes. In a mouse model of colorectal or melanoma tumors treated with ICIs and 12 Gy in one fraction to the tumor ± draining lymph nodes, ENI attenuated immune cell infiltration, chemokine expression and intratumoral antigen-specific CD8 + T-cells, thus decreasing the synergistic effect between RT and ICIs [50]. ENI also adversely affected survival when combined with ICIs [50]. Other studies have shown a strong correlation between the RT volume and RT-induced lymphopenia [30, 33]. Thus, to enhance the synergistic effect between RT and ICIs, target volumes not involving the pelvic lymph nodes may be preferable when combining RT with immunotherapy in the localized MIBC setting since indirect irradiation of bone marrow structures during ENI could induce lymphopenia. To our knowledge, there are no clinical trials currently addressing this question in MIBC.
In the metastatic setting, a relevant question is which metastatic site to irradiate if several are present. Most reported cases of the abscopal effect involved RT to visceral metastases [25], suggesting that visceral sites may be more immunogenic than osseous sites; although direct comparative studies are lacking. In a recent review, Brooks et al. [51] proposed the provocative idea that the single-site irradiation abscopal approach should be abandoned to the benefit of comprehensive multi-sites irradiation when combing RT and ICIs. They formulated the hypothesis that irradiating multiple sites of disease reduces tumor burden while also increasing the likelihood of exposure and priming to the desired tumor-associated antigens. This would circumvent the inhibitory effects of the TME within each individual tissue bed, thus increasing the probability of activation of the anti-tumor immune process. Recent clinical trials studying ICIs in combination with multi-site irradiation support this hypothesis [52, 53]. Randomized trials comparing single to multi-site irradiation and stratifying patients with limited and extensive metastatic burden are needed.
Toxicities
The adverse effects (AEs) associated with ICIs use (irAEs) and their management are well documented [54]. RT-related AEs are thought to be in part related to the immune system response, mostly through its effects on pro-inflammatory and fibrogenic cytokines [55]. There are concerns that the combination of RT and immunotherapy could lead to a cumulative toxicity profile. The safety considerations related to the combination of RT with ICIs in solid cancers have been reviewed elsewhere, with grade ≥ 3 irAEs ranging from 7–31% across studies [56].
In the treatment of localized MIBC, acute AEs are mostly related to the combination of pelvic irradiation and concomitant chemotherapy. These, most commonly, include gastro-intestinal (GI) and genito-urinary (GU) AEs. Acute GU AEs range from 4 to 21% across studies, whereas acute GI AEs range from 2 to 21% [1]. Late grade 3 pelvic toxicities occur in 2–7% of patients [47, 57]. The use of hypofractionated RT can also lead to more GI toxicity in the TMT setting [47]. Recently, a phase I trial evaluated the safety of concomitant intravenous Atezolizumab (anti-PDL-1) in combination with hypofractionated TMT in patients with T2–T4aN0M0 MIBC (NCT03620435, Table 3). The study closed prematurely due to unacceptable grade 3 GI toxicity in 50% of the patients (Table 4) [58]. In addition, Tree et al. also reported unacceptable toxicity when using pembrolizumab and weekly hypofractionated RT for metastatic or locally advanced MIBC in the phase 1 PLUMMB trial (NCT02560636) [59]. The trial was stopped for amendment after two out of five patients developed grade 3 GU AEs and one experienced grade 4 rectal perforation (Table 4) [59]. Thus, caution should be taken when ICIs are given concurrently with hypofractionated RT. Since the sequencing of TMT and immunotherapy does not appear to affect efficacy in MIBC [45], and in light of acute toxicity concerns presented herein, currently we favor neoadjuvant or adjuvant immunotherapy.
Finally, it is important to note that the toxicity of combined ICIs and RT could be enhanced when chemotherapy is used in the context of TMT. In metastatic MIBC, RT delivered to visceral metastases, such as the lungs or liver could also yield different irAEs, including pneumonitis, hepatitis or hematologic toxicities [54, 56]. Of course, the relative sensitivity of the irradiated organ and the technique/dose used will also impact on the toxicity profile.
Perspectives
Through its immunomodulatory capability, RT is being studied as a targeted therapy modality that can enhance systemic tumor control. A search of the ClinicalTrials.gov database as of March 31st, 2020 showed 615 ongoing clinical trials combining immunotherapy and RT, of which 24 are in MIBC patients. Several trials are looking into combined immunotherapy and RT in the locally advanced or metastatic setting (Table 2). Other studies are investigating combined ICIs and RT either in the neoadjuvant setting or concurrently with TMT as a bladder-preserving approach (Table 3). The use of ICIs as maintenance treatment after TMT is also being studied in patients that cannot undergo salvage radical cystectomy. These trials may improve outcomes in MIBC and broaden treatment options for patients, particularly for the non-negligible proportion who are too frail to either undergo chemotherapy or surgery.
Conclusion
The accumulating pre-clinical and clinical body of evidence reviewed in this article supports the hypothesis that through its cytotoxic and immunotherapy effects, RT has the potential to synergize with ICIs to improve oncological outcomes in patients with localized or metastatic MIBC. Increased toxicity might be challenging especially when combining ICIs and hypofractionated RT regimens. The many ongoing clinical trials on the subject will help answer many practical questions related to RT scheduling, dose, fractionation, and targets for RT. Undoubtedly, well-designed randomized trials are warranted in this newly developing field with special attention given to how effectively and accurately measure treatment response.
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Daro-Faye, M., Kassouf, W., Souhami, L. et al. Combined radiotherapy and immunotherapy in urothelial bladder cancer: harnessing the full potential of the anti-tumor immune response. World J Urol 39, 1331–1343 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00345-020-03440-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00345-020-03440-4