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A prospective study of immune responses in patients with lung metastases treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy with or without concurrent systemic treatment.

Dan G DudaEleni GkikaElke FiratSonja AdebahrErika GrafAlexandra EichhorstGianluca RadicioniSimon LoSimon SpohnUrsula NestleNils Henrik NicolayGabriele NiedermannAnca-Ligia Grosu
Published in: Research square (2023)
We prospectively evaluated the effects of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) on circulating immune cells. Patients with oligo-metastatic and oligo-progressive pulmonary lesions were treated with SBRT with (cSBRT) or without (SBRT group) concurrent systemic treatment (chemotherapy or immune checkpoint blockade) using different fractionation regimes. Immunoprofiling of peripheral blood cells was performed at baseline, during, at the end of SBRT, and at the first and second follow-ups. The study accrued 100 patients (80 with evaluable samples). The proportion of proliferating CD8+ T-cells significantly increased after treatment. This increase remained significant at follow-up in the SBRT group, but not in the cSBRT group and was not detected with doses of >10Gy per fraction indicating that lower doses are necessary to increase proliferating T-cells' frequency. We detected no favorable impact of concurrent systemic treatment on systemic immune responses. The optimal timing of systemic treatment may be post-SBRT to leverage the immune-modulating effects of SBRT.
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