Systemic enhancement of antitumour immunity by peritumourally implanted immunomodulatory macroporous scaffolds.
Fatemeh S MajediMohammad Mahdi Hasani-SadrabadiTimothy J ThaulandSundeep G KeswaniSong LiLouis-S BouchardManish J ButtePublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2022)
A tumour microenvironment abundant in regulatory T (T reg ) cells aids solid tumours to evade clearance by effector T cells. Systemic strategies to suppress T reg cells or to augment immunity can elicit autoimmune side effects, cytokine storms and other toxicities. Here we report the design, fabrication and therapeutic performance of a biodegradable macroporous scaffold, implanted peritumourally, that releases a small-molecule inhibitor of transforming growth factor β to suppress T reg cells, chemokines to attract effector T cells and antibodies to stimulate them. In two mouse models of aggressive tumours, the implant boosted the recruitment and activation of effector T cells into the tumour and depleted it of T reg cells, which resulted in an 'immunological abscopal effect' on distant metastases and in the establishment of long-term memory that impeded tumour recurrence. We also show that the scaffold can be used to deliver tumour-antigen-specific T cells into the tumour. Peritumourally implanted immunomodulatory scaffolds may represent a general strategy to enhance T-cell immunity and avoid the toxicities of systemic therapies.