BackgroundOncolytic virotherapy has become an important branch of cancer immunotherapy. This study investigated the efficacy of an oncolytic adenovirus (OAV), OncoViron, with synergistic mechanisms in the treatment of multiple solid tumors.MethodsAn OAV, OncoViron, was constructed and investigated by cytological experiments and implanted tumor models of multiple solid tumor cell lines to certify its anticancer efficacy, the synergistic effects of viral oncolysis and transgene anticancer activity of OncoViron, as well as oncolytic virotherapy combined with immunotherapy, were also verified.ResultsThe selective replication of OncoViron mediated high expression of anticancer factors, specifically targeted a variety of solid tumors and significantly inhibited cancer cell proliferation. On a variety of implanted solid tumor models in immunodeficient mice, immunocompetent mice, and humanized mice, OncoViron showed great anticancer effects on its own and in combination with programmed death 1 (PD-1) antibody and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells. Pathological examination, single-cell sequencing, and spatial transcriptome analysis of animal implanted tumor specimens confirmed that OncoViron significantly altered the gene expression profile of infected cancer cells, not only recruiting a large number of lymphocytes, natural killer cells, and mononuclear macrophages into tumor microenvironment (TME) and activated immune cells, especially T cells but also inducing M1 polarization of macrophages and promoting the release of more immune cytokines, thereby remodeling the TME for coordinating PD-1 antibody or CAR T therapy.ConclusionsThe chimeric OncoViron is a novel broad-spectrum anticancer product with multiple mechanisms of synergistic and potentiated immunotherapy, creating a good opportunity for combined immunotherapy against solid tumors.
Rationale:Epithelioid angiosarcoma (EA) is a rare, highly invasive tumor. The histopathological features of EA are not distinct and less reported in the literature, and most of the medical records are incomplete.Patient concerns:A 61-year-old woman who came to the hospital because of pain in her right hip. This patient had had surgery for right hip tuberculosis 30 years ago.Diagnoses:The present study reports a case of primary EA of bone with aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) that was diagnosed by 3 experienced pathologists.Interventions:The patients had undergone 2 surgeries; however, an early recurrence of the tumor was caused the death of the patient.Outcomes:Ten EA cases from other literature were reviewed in this article; all the symptoms were found in different parts of bone, and the case data were relatively complete. The primary clinical features and nonspecific histopathological morphology of the disease were summarized from the 11 cases mentioned in the literature, and the main immunohistochemistry characteristics and diagnostic traps of EA were reviewed.Lessons:Because the tumor has no characteristic diagnostic index in imaging and laboratory examination, the histopathologic features are not typical, especially in the case of obvious secondary lesions. It is easy to miss and misdiagnose. If possible, the diagnosis should be combined with immunohistochemical results.
The immunosuppressive state in the tumor microenvironment (TME) of breast cancer makes it difficult to treat with immunotherapy. Oncolytic viruses not only lyse tumor cells but also reshape the TME. Therefore, they can play a multi-mechanism synergistic effect with immunotherapy. In this study, an oncolytic adenovirus Ad5F11bSP-Rantes was constructed and used as a vector to express the chemokine Rantes. The objective of this study was to test the dual mechanisms of the oncolytic effect mediated by virus replication and the enhanced anticancer immune response mediated by Rantes chemotaxis of immune cells. It was found that Ad5F11bSP-Rantes has strong infectivity and effective killing activity against breast cancer cells. In the established triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) xenograft model in NCG mice whose immune system was humanized with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), Ad5F11bSP-Rantes achieved 88.33% tumor inhibition rate. Rantes expression was high in mouse blood, a large number of CD3+ lymphocytes infiltrated in tumor tissues and E-cadherin was up-regulated in cancer cells, suggesting that Ad5F11bSP-Rantes altered the TME and induced a reversal of cancer cell epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT). In conclusion, oncolytic adenovirus can exert the oncolytic effect and the chemotactic effect of immune cells and realize the synergy of multiple anticancer effects. This strategy creates a candidate treatment for the optimization of breast cancer, especially TNBC, combination therapy.
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