Multi-modality (surgery, chemo, radiation) therapy and combination chemotherapy (e.g, CHOP and ABVD) have long been the mainstays of treating cancer. So, we should not be surprised to read about the discovery made by scientists at Rice University and MD Anderson regarding a two-step approach involving radiation and immunotherapy.
Now, what did surprise me was the analogy the authors made to cyberwarfare:
Recent research has found that cancer is already adept at using cyberwarfare against the immune system, and we studied the interplay between cancer and the immune system to see how we might turn the tables on cancer,” said Rice University’s Eshel Ben-Jacob, co-author of a new study this week in the Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The team showed that dendritic cells use exosomes (packets of DNA, RNA, microRNA’s, and proteins sealed in vesicles) to re-program effector cells. Dendritic cells are the central link between the innate and the adaptive immune response. In unleashing an adaptive response, dendritic cells reprogram T-helper cells.
Well, cancer cells have co-opted the exosomal pathway to also re-program cells to assist their growth, survival, and metastases through heterotypic cellular interactions.
The cancer cells use exosomes to disrupt the ability of dendritic cells to signal and command T cells in adaptive immune response. “We were inspired to do this research by two papers — one that showed how the dendritic cells use the exosome to fight cancer and another that showed how cancer cells co-opt the exosomal system both to prevent the bone marrow from making dendritic cells and disable dendritic cells’ coaching abilities,” Ben-Jacob said.
“This is cyberwarfare, pure and simple. Cancer uses the immune systems’ own communications network to attack not the soldiers but the generals that are coordinating the body’s defense.”
“You should imagine there is a tug-of-war between the cancer and the immune system,” said study co-author and CTBP co-director José Onuchic, Rice’s Harry C. and Olga K. Wiess Professor of Physics and Astronomy. “Sometimes one side wins and sometimes the other. The question is whether we can understand this battle enough to use radiotherapy or chemotherapy in such a way as to change the balance of the tug-of-war in favor of the immune system.”
The group postulates that there are 3 possible states of cancer:
- Weak state – the immune system is holding the cancer in check
- Strong state – the cancer cells have evaded immune attack
- Intermediate state – the immune system is on high alert
The exciting finding is that by alternating multimodality therapy, the state of being of the cancer cell can be modulated:
Ben-Jacob said the team showed that it was possible to force cancer from the strong to the moderate state by alternating cycles of radiation or chemotherapy with immune-boosting treatments.
“Our model shows that just a few of these treatment-boosting cycles can alter the cancer-immune balance to help the immune system bring the cancer to the moderate state,” Ben-Jacob said. “Once in the intermediate state, cancer can be brought further down to the weak state by a few short pulses of immune boosting.
“It is much more effective to use a two-step process and drive cancer from the strong to the intermediate state and then from the intermediate to the weak state,” he said. “Without the exosome — the cancer-immune cyberwar nanocarriers — and the third state, this two-step approach wouldn’t be possible.”