학술논문

IFN-Type-I Response and Systemic Immunity in Rectal Adenocarcinoma Patients Treated with Conventional or Hypofractionated Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy
Document Type
Report
Source
Biomolecules. April, 2024, Vol. 14 Issue 4
Subject
Greece
Language
English
ISSN
2218-273X
Abstract
The IFN-type-I pathway is involved in radiotherapy (RT)-mediated immune responses. Large RT fractions have been suggested to potently induce this pathway. Neoadjuvant hypofractionated short-course (scRT) and conventional long-course (lcRT) RT applied for the treatment of locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma patients provides a unique model to address the immuno-stimulatory properties of RT on a systemic level. We prospectively analyzed the IFNβ plasma levels and lymphocyte counts (LCs) of rectal adenocarcinoma patients before and after treatment with scRT (n = 22) and lcRT (n = 40). Flow cytometry was conducted to assess the effects on lymphocytic subpopulations in a subset of 20 patients. A statistically significant increase in the post-RT IFNβ plasma levels was noted in patients undergoing scRT (p = 0.004). Improved pathological tumor regression was associated with elevated post-RT IFNβ levels (p = 0.003). Although all patients experienced substantial lymphopenia after treatment, the post-RT LC of patients treated with scRT were significantly higher compared to lcRT (p = 0.001). Patients undergoing scRT displayed significantly lower percentages of regulatory CD4+/CD25+ T-cells after therapy (p = 0.02). scRT enables effective stimulation of the IFN-type-I pathway on a systemic level and confers decreased lymphocytic cytotoxicity and limited regulatory T-cell activation compared to lcRT, supporting its increasing role in immuno-RT trials.
Author(s): Ioannis M. Koukourakis (corresponding author) [1,*]; Erasmia Xanthopoulou [2]; Michael I. Koukourakis [2]; Dina Tiniakos [3,4]; Vassilis Kouloulias (corresponding author) [5,*]; Anna Zygogianni [1] 1. Introduction Radiotherapy’s (RT) cytotoxic [...]