Abstract
Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a newly developed cell-selective cancer therapy with enormous potential for treating cancer in a variety of ways. NIR-PIT not only kills cancer cells, but can also eliminate other unfavorable cells including cancer stem cells and immune-suppressor cells, among others, without damaging favorable cells such as immune cells, vascular cells and tissue stem cells. This technique can efficiently activate anti-tumor host immunity in a way that can even cure untreated distant metastasis.
You have full access to this open access chapter, Download conference paper PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
1 Introduction
Targeted cancer therapies offer the promise of highly effective tumor control with fewer side-effects than conventional cancer treatments. In this approach, drugs or radioisotopes are directed to a tumor by coupling to monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against specific targets on the cancer cell surface. These antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs) have had modest commercial success, but side-effects remain problematic. We have greatly advanced targeted cancer detection that assists surgical or endoscopic therapy by developing a series of optical imaging probes (‘activatable probes’) that only fluoresce when they are bound to or inside tumors (Kobayashi et al. 2010; Kobayashi and Choyke 2011), enabling precise tracking of cancer cells and drugs in the tissue (Urano et al. 2009). With these probes, cancer-specific fluorescence has been achieved in animal models and in fresh surgical specimens from cancer patients.
From a physics perspective, excitation energy can be dissipated in the form of fluorescent light for diagnosis. Alternatively, it can be exchanged for heat, oxidation or photochemical reactions to induce cytotoxic treatment. Our work is to be differentiated from conventional photodynamic therapy (PDT). PDT has been in limited clinical use for several decades. Photofrin (porfimer) is the most commonly employed PDT agent and has been used to treat endobronchial, esophageal and bladder cancers. Photofrin and related compounds passively permeate into cells based on their hydrophobicity which is non-specific but slightly favors uptake in cancer cells and when exposed to light in the presence of oxygen, generate reactive oxygen species. Reactive oxygen species are typically toxic to the cell, resulting in cell death, however, this typically occurs within the cytoplasm and results in apoptosis rather than necrosis. Although PDT is used in specific cases, widespread adoption has been limited because the current compounds distribute rather non-specifically and permeate into normal cells leading to off-target toxicities. For instance, patients are often unable to go outside into direct sunlight for several months and even room light for several days. Incidental exposure to strong light, for instance, from a copy machine, can be catastrophic. Moreover, PDT is notorious for inducing serious inflammatory changes at the treatment site, limiting its utility. This relates to the non-specific biodistribution and slow clearance rates (half-life of 23 days) of PDT agents. More general use of PDT is thus limited by its potential side effects. Targeted PDT has been attempted but delivery issues related to the large number of photosensitizer molecules in each conjugate, limits the achievable concentrations of the photosensitizer.
By extending the target-cell specific fluorescence imaging methodology from ‘see’ for cancer detection to ‘kill’ for cancer therapy, we then developed a new form of ADC comprised of an mAb attached to a photoabsorbing phthalocyanine-based chemical, termed IRDye700DX (IR700). When this conjugate is injected and the target cancer tissue is illuminated with harmless near-infrared light of wavelength 690 nm, the IR700 part of the molecule becomes activated and splits, turning hydrophobic, which compromises the cell membrane, thereby killing the cancer cell. This approach is safer than other conventional ADCs because it only kills illuminated cells that bind mAb–IR700 conjugates. Since 690 nm light penetrates skin and tissue to several centimeters in depth without damaging any normal cells, the therapy can access most organs from the surface or via endoscopy or fine optical fiber insertion through a transparent catheter needle without surgery. Moreover, the loss of fluorescence upon activation allows therapeutic effects to be monitored in real time. We termed this new form of phototherapy ‘near-infrared photoimmunotherapy’ (NIR-PIT) (Mitsunaga et al. 2011) (Fig. 22.1).
2 NIR-PIT Can Selectively Kill Various Cancer Cells
We have shown that this approach works for numerous molecular targets and cancer types. By simply changing the antibody, NIR-PIT can target a broad array of cancer-specific target molecules including the proteins EGFR, HER2, PSMA, CD25, CEA, Mesothelin, GPC3, CD20 and PD-L1, among others. When NIR-PIT was employed for targeting cancer cells to be killed in animal models, we observed significant tumor shrinkage after a single administration of the conjugate and NIR light, and repeated exposure to NIR light produced a more than 80% reduction of the exposed tumors with prolonged disease-free survival and without evident adverse side-effects. Since NIR-PIT can achieve spatially selective killing of target cells, it can be used to eliminate cells containing cancer stem cell markers such as CD44 (Jin et al. 2016) and CD133 (Jing et al. 2016) as we have demonstrated for breast cancer and glioblastoma stem cells, respectively, without harming normal stem cells expressing these markers in other parts of the body. Targeting cancer stem cells in this way suppresses tumor regrowth for long periods (Fig. 22.2).
3 NIR-PIT Rapidly Enhances Nano-Drug Delivery
In addition, NIR-PIT has a desirable side-effect: it initially causes enlargement of the tumor vasculature, increasing blood flow and permeability that induces enhanced delivery of various size of nano-drugs ranging from 5 to 300 nm in diameter.
To date, the delivery of nano-sized therapeutic agents to cancers has been disappointing based as it is on enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) caused by the relatively leaky nature of cancer vasculature. As a result of EPR, there is a modest delivery of nano-sized agents which, although promising as a class of drugs, have demonstrated limited success in oncology. For instance, the EPR effect is estimated to increase nano-drug delivery 20–30% in most cases and 200% in the best case scenario compared with normal tissues. However, after NIR-PIT we observed dramatically increased permeability and retention in the treated tumor bed. We termed this phenomenon, super-enhanced permeability and retention effects (SUPR). Post NIR-PIT SUPR dramatically enhances the delivery of nano-sized agents into treated tissue by up to 24-fold compared with conventional EPR effects (Sano et al. 2013). SUPR occurs because the initial NIR-PIT only kills antigen expressing tumor cells in the perivascular space while leaving the tumor vessels intact, enabling a striking increase in blood volume and, therefore, nano-drug perfusion into the tumor bed within tumor vessels. This permits the delivery of dramatically higher concentrations of nano-sized drugs into treated tumors with minimal uptake in untreated regions. Thus, after NIR-PIT the delivery of nano-drugs into tumors results in highly efficient tumor killing of cells surviving NIR-PIT with minimal side effects to other organs as therapeutic effects can be achieved at much lower doses (Fig. 22.3).
4 NIR-PIT Initiates Anti-Tumor Host Immunity and Promotes Rapid Healing
Three-dimensional dynamic quantitative phase-contrast microscopy (QPM) and dual selective plane illumination microscopy (dSPIM) of tumor cells undergoing PIT showed rapid swelling in treated cells immediately after light exposure suggesting rapid water influx into cells, followed by irreversible morphologic changes such as bleb formation, and rupture of cellular membrane and vesicles. Furthermore, biological markers of ICD including relocation of HSP70/90 and calreticulin from cytosol to cellular membrane, and release of calreticulin, ATP and High Mobility Group Box 1 (HMGB1), were clearly detected immediately after NIR-PIT. When NIR-PIT was performed in a mixed culture of cancer cells and immature dendritic cells, maturation of immature dendritic cells was strongly induced rapidly after NIR-PIT against cancer cells.
Because cell membranes across mammalian species exhibit virtually identical physico-chemical properties, they are equally susceptible to the photochemical damage induced by NIR-PIT. Thus, new NIR-PIT conjugates can be developed in vitro, ex vivo or in animal models with a very high likelihood of successful translation to human patients. This translatability is an important advantage of our chemistry- and photophysics-based approach to cancer treatment. NIR-PIT technology opens the doors for many clinical applications and we hope it will lead to new treatments for numerous different cancer types. In addition, we have found that intact tissue stem cells in the tumor bed greatly contribute to clean wound healing, vital for improving the prognosis and quality of life of cancer patients treated with NIR-PIT.
5 Targeting Systemic Metastases
Furthermore, NIR-PIT also shows great promise as an indirect cancer immunotherapy. NIR-PIT achieved spatially selective depletion of tumor-associated immunosuppressing regulatory T cells (Tregs), which inhibit anti-tumor attack (and autoimmunity) by cytotoxic CD8+T cells that proliferate within a tumor. Eliminating Tregs locally in a tumor bed allows the adjacent cytotoxic CD8+T and natural killer (NK) cells to instantly attack the tumor within 1 h. Remarkably, Treg-targeting NIR-PIT also caused the selective systemic regression of untreated distant metastatic tumors with the same cell origin as the treated tumor within 2 days, presumably because once awakened, cytotoxic CD8+T cells were no longer susceptible to Treg-induced inactivity (Sato et al. 2016). In contrast, awakened cytotoxic CD8+T cells did not attack normal cells or other cancer cells, ensuring that Treg-targeting NIR-PIT was a highly cell-selective cancer therapy with minimal autoimmune adverse side-effects of the type seen with systemic cancer immunotherapies that activate host-immunity throughout the body (Fig. 22.4).
6 Perspective
NIR-PIT shows immense promise for practical and clinical applications. Several NIR-PIT-related patents were licensed to the start-up biotech company Aspyrian Therapeutic Inc., which started a phase I clinical trial in June 2015 and currently advanced to phase II, using the cetuximab–IR700 conjugate (RM-1929) to treat head and neck cancer patients who had failed to respond to all conventional cancer therapies including surgery, chemotherapy and radiation therapy (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02422979). Similar trials are planned for lung, esophageal, bladder and pancreatic cancer, some precancerous conditions including leukoplakia and papillomatosis, and others by targeting cancer cells or immune-suppressor cells in the near future. We have engaged researchers internationally to further explore the possibilities of NIR-PIT and to expedite its introduction into the clinic.
References
Jin J, Krishnamachary B, Mironchik Y, Kobayashi H, Bhujwalla ZM (2016) Phototheranostics of CD44-positive cell populations in triple negative breast cancer. Sci Rep 6:27871
Jing H, Weidensteiner C, Reichardt W, Gaedicke S, Zhu X, Grosu AL, Kobayashi H, Niedermann G (2016) Imaging and selective elimination of glioblastoma stem cells with theranostic near-infrared-labeled CD133-specific antibodies. Theranostics 6:862–874
Kobayashi H, Choyke PL (2011) Target-cancer-cell-specific activatable fluorescence imaging probes: rational design and in vivo applications. Acc Chem Res 44:83–90
Kobayashi H, Ogawa M, Alford R, Choyke PL, Urano Y (2010) New strategies for fluorescent probe design in medical diagnostic imaging. Chem Rev 110:2620–2640
Mitsunaga M, Ogawa M, Kosaka N, Rosenblum LT, Choyke PL, Kobayashi H (2011) Cancer cell-selective in vivo near infrared photoimmunotherapy targeting specific membrane molecules. Nat Med 17:1685–1691
Sano K, Nakajima T, Choyke PL, Kobayashi H (2013) Markedly enhanced permeability and retention effects induced by photo-immunotherapy of tumors. ACS Nano 7:717–724
Sato K, Sato N, Xu B, Nakamura Y, Nagaya T, Choyke PL, Hasegawa Y, Kobayashi H (2016) Spatially selective depletion of tumor-associated regulatory T cells with near-infrared photoimmunotherapy. Sci Transl Med 8:352ra110
Urano Y, Asanuma D, Hama Y, Koyama Y, Barrett T, Kamiya M, Nagano T, Watanabe T, Hasegawa A, Choyke PL et al (2009) Selective molecular imaging of viable cancer cells with pH-activatable fluorescence probes. Nat Med 15:104–109
Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
1 Supplementary Electronic Material (S)
(MP4 933398 kb)
Rights and permissions
Open Access This chapter is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license and indicate if changes were made.
The images or other third party material in this chapter are included in the chapter's Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the chapter's Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder.
Copyright information
© 2020 The Author(s)
About this paper
Cite this paper
Kobayashi, H. (2020). Theranostic Near-Infrared Photoimmunotherapy. In: Toyama, Y., Miyawaki, A., Nakamura, M., Jinzaki, M. (eds) Make Life Visible. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-7908-6_22
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-7908-6_22
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Singapore
Print ISBN: 978-981-13-7907-9
Online ISBN: 978-981-13-7908-6
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)