标准抗癌药物和常用辅助药物的免疫肿瘤学效应:体外评估

Tove Selvin, Malin Berglund, Lena Lenhammar, Magnus Lindskog, Malin Jarvius, Rolf Larsson, Peter Nygren, Mårten Fryknäs, Claes R Andersson
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摘要

在肿瘤学领域,对癌细胞和免疫细胞产生的综合效应显然会影响治疗效果。因此,我们评估了 46 种标准抗癌药物和 22 种常用非抗癌药物的潜在免疫效应。我们使用了一个微型体外模型系统,该系统由荧光标记的人类结肠癌和肺癌细胞系组成,这些细胞系以单株培养方式生长,并与活化的外周血单核细胞(PBMCs)共培养。然后应用布利斯独立模型检测药物与活化免疫细胞之间的拮抗作用和协同作用。在标准抗癌药物中,酪氨酸激酶抑制剂(TKIs)是拮抗和协同作用的主要诱导剂。Ruxolitinib和达沙替尼是拮抗作用最明显的药物,Bliss评分最低,而索拉非尼则与活化的白细胞介导细胞有协同作用。大多数并用药物既不产生拮抗作用,也不产生协同作用。然而,在结肠癌模型中,他汀类药物美伐他汀和辛伐他汀在所有测试药物浓度下都能与活化的 PBMC 产生协同作用,这是独一无二的。我们利用微型化肿瘤免疫模型,在体外免疫肿瘤学环境中对多种药物进行了时间和成本效益评估。利用这种方法,我们确定了 TKIs 和他汀类药物的免疫调节作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Immuno-oncological effects of standard anticancer agents and commonly used concomitant drugs: an in vitro assessment
It has become evident in the field of oncology that the outcome of medical treatment is influenced by the combined effect exerted on both cancer- and immune cells. Therefore, we evaluated potential immunological effects of 46 standard anticancer agents and 22 commonly administered concomitant non-cancer drugs. We utilized a miniaturized in vitro model system comprised of fluorescently labeled human colon and lung cancer cell lines grown as monocultures and co-cultured with activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). The Bliss Independence Model was then applied to detect antagonism and synergy between the drugs and activated immune cells. Among the standard anticancer agents, tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) stood out as the top inducers of both antagonism and synergy. Ruxolitinib and dasatinib emerged as the most notably antagonistic substances, exhibiting the lowest Bliss scores, whereas sorafenib was shown to synergize with activated PBMCs. Most concomitant drugs did not induce neither antagonism nor synergy. However, the statins mevastatin and simvastatin were uniquely shown to synergize with activated PBMC at all tested drug concentrations in the colon cancer model. We utilized a miniaturized tumor-immune model to enable time and cost-effective evaluation of a broad panel of drugs in an immuno-oncology setting in vitro. Using this approach, immunomodulatory effects exerted by TKIs and statins were identified.
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